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Asma Nasser Alsaleh. PhD - د. أسماء ناصر الصالح

Assistant Professor

Faculty member- عضو هيئة تدريس

كلية العلوم
Building 5-Level 3- Office 271/ مبنى 5، الدور 3، مكتب 271
المنشورات
مقال فى مجلة
2018

Viruses causing lower respiratory symptoms in young children: findings from the ORChID birth cohort.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION:

Viral acute respiratory infections (ARIs) cause substantial child morbidity. Sensitive molecular-based assays aid virus detection, but the clinical significance of positive tests remains uncertain as some viruses may be found in both acutely ill and healthy children. We describe disease-pathogen associations of respiratory viruses and quantify virus-specific attributable risk of ARIs in healthy children during the first 2 years of life.

METHODS:

One hundred fifty-eight term newborn babies in Brisbane, Australia, were recruited progressively into a longitudinal, community-based, birth cohort study conducted between September 2010 and October 2014. A daily tick-box diary captured predefined respiratory symptoms from birth until their second birthday. Weekly parent-collected nasal swabs were batch-tested for 17 respiratory viruses by PCR assays, allowing calculation of virus-specific attributable fractions in the exposed (AFE) to determine the proportion of virus-positive children whose ARI symptoms could be attributed to that particular virus.

RESULTS:

Of 8100 nasal swabs analysed, 2646 (32.7%) were virus-positive (275 virus codetections, 3.4%), with human rhinoviruses accounting for 2058/2646 (77.8%) positive swabs. Viruses were detected in 1154/1530 (75.4%) ARI episodes and in 984/4308 (22.8%) swabs from asymptomatic periods. Respiratory syncytial virus (AFE: 68% (95% CI 45% to 82%)) and human metapneumovirus (AFE: 69% (95% CI 43% to 83%)) were strongly associated with higher risk of lower respiratory symptoms.

DISCUSSION:

The strong association of respiratory syncytial virus and human metapneumovirus with ARIs and lower respiratory symptoms in young children managed within the community indicates successful development of vaccines against these two viruses should provide substantial health benefits.

نوع عمل المنشور
research article
رقم المجلد
73
رقم الانشاء
10
مجلة/صحيفة
Thorax.
الصفحات
969-979
مزيد من المنشورات
publications

A community-based birth cohort study collected weekly nasal swabs and recorded daily symptoms from 157 full-term infants. An average of 0.25 (95% CI: 0.18, 0.34) respiratory virus infections per…

بواسطة Sarna M, Alsaleh A, Lambert SB, Ware RS, Mhango L, Mackay IM, Whiley DM, Sloots T, Grimwood K
2016
publications

Background

بواسطة Asma Alsaleh, David M Whiley, Seweryn Bialasiewicz, Stephen B Lambert, Robert S Ware, Michael D Nissen, Theo P Sloots, Keith Grimwood
2014