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The burden of human coronavirus infection in children hospitalized with severe lower respiratory tract infection in Cape Town, South Africa (2012-2013)

Introduction: In order to better understand the epidemiology and burden of human coronaviruses - NL63, HKU1, OC43 and 229E in South Africa, their role in the aetiology of childhood pneumonia needs to be described. Methods: We used data collected between September 2012 – September 2013 from children...

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Main Author: Aliyu, Abdulmumuni Samuel
Other Authors: Muloiwa, Rudzani
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Paediatrics and Child Health 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Aliyu, Abdulmumuni Samuel
author2 Muloiwa, Rudzani
author_browse Aliyu, Abdulmumuni Samuel
Muloiwa, Rudzani
author_facet Muloiwa, Rudzani
Aliyu, Abdulmumuni Samuel
author_sort Aliyu, Abdulmumuni Samuel
collection Thesis
description Introduction: In order to better understand the epidemiology and burden of human coronaviruses - NL63, HKU1, OC43 and 229E in South Africa, their role in the aetiology of childhood pneumonia needs to be described. Methods: We used data collected between September 2012 – September 2013 from children aged < 13 years with lower respiratory illness at Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital. Respiratory samples including a nasopharyngeal swab (NP) and induced sputum (IS) were taken and tested for the four strains of coronaviruses using FTD33 multiplex realtime PCR. Results: A total of 460 respiratory samples were analysed. Of these, 258 (56.0%) were male and 19 (4.1%) HIV infected. The median age of the children was 8 (IQR 4-18) months. Nasopharyngeal (NP) samples were obtained from 460 children while induced sputum (IS) was not available for six children due to sample loss prior to analysis, leaving 454 available for analysis. A total of 42 (9.1%, 95% CI 6.7- 12.1%) participants tested positive for HCoV in at least one of the two specimens. PCR was able to detect a total of 35 (7.7%) cases from the 454 tested IS specimens compared to 23 (5.0%) detected out of 460 NP samples. The commonest detected HCoVs were coronavirus OC43 with 20 (4.3%) detected from either specimen followed by coronavirus NL63 or coronavirus HKU detected in 14 (3.0%) and 10 (2.2%) of positive test samples, respectively. The least common virus detected HCoV was coronavirus 229E detected in both positive test samples of one participant. Overall HCoVs were detected in 23 (8.9%) of boys compared to 19 (9.1%) of the girls who returned a positive test; p=0.856. The overall age distribution of children with PCR detected HCoVs was similar to that of children with a negative result with median age of 10 (IQR 5- 16) months and median of 8 (IQR 4- 19) months, respectively; p=0.535. Prevalence of HCoV was 11/192 (5.7%), 23/153 (15.0%) and 8/115 (7.0%) in children <6 months old, 6-18 months and over 18 months respectively; p=0.008. Conclusion: Children aged 6 to 18 months had double the risk of other age groups.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Department of Paediatrics and Child Health
publisherStr Department of Paediatrics and Child Health
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36506 The burden of human coronavirus infection in children hospitalized with severe lower respiratory tract infection in Cape Town, South Africa (2012-2013) Aliyu, Abdulmumuni Samuel Muloiwa, Rudzani Maternal and Child Health Introduction: In order to better understand the epidemiology and burden of human coronaviruses - NL63, HKU1, OC43 and 229E in South Africa, their role in the aetiology of childhood pneumonia needs to be described. Methods: We used data collected between September 2012 – September 2013 from children aged < 13 years with lower respiratory illness at Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital. Respiratory samples including a nasopharyngeal swab (NP) and induced sputum (IS) were taken and tested for the four strains of coronaviruses using FTD33 multiplex realtime PCR. Results: A total of 460 respiratory samples were analysed. Of these, 258 (56.0%) were male and 19 (4.1%) HIV infected. The median age of the children was 8 (IQR 4-18) months. Nasopharyngeal (NP) samples were obtained from 460 children while induced sputum (IS) was not available for six children due to sample loss prior to analysis, leaving 454 available for analysis. A total of 42 (9.1%, 95% CI 6.7- 12.1%) participants tested positive for HCoV in at least one of the two specimens. PCR was able to detect a total of 35 (7.7%) cases from the 454 tested IS specimens compared to 23 (5.0%) detected out of 460 NP samples. The commonest detected HCoVs were coronavirus OC43 with 20 (4.3%) detected from either specimen followed by coronavirus NL63 or coronavirus HKU detected in 14 (3.0%) and 10 (2.2%) of positive test samples, respectively. The least common virus detected HCoV was coronavirus 229E detected in both positive test samples of one participant. Overall HCoVs were detected in 23 (8.9%) of boys compared to 19 (9.1%) of the girls who returned a positive test; p=0.856. The overall age distribution of children with PCR detected HCoVs was similar to that of children with a negative result with median age of 10 (IQR 5- 16) months and median of 8 (IQR 4- 19) months, respectively; p=0.535. Prevalence of HCoV was 11/192 (5.7%), 23/153 (15.0%) and 8/115 (7.0%) in children <6 months old, 6-18 months and over 18 months respectively; p=0.008. Conclusion: Children aged 6 to 18 months had double the risk of other age groups. 2022-06-22T13:55:54Z 2022-06-22T13:55:54Z 2022 2022-06-21T11:40:02Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36506 eng application/pdf Department of Paediatrics and Child Health Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Maternal and Child Health
Aliyu, Abdulmumuni Samuel
The burden of human coronavirus infection in children hospitalized with severe lower respiratory tract infection in Cape Town, South Africa (2012-2013)
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The burden of human coronavirus infection in children hospitalized with severe lower respiratory tract infection in Cape Town, South Africa (2012-2013)
title_full The burden of human coronavirus infection in children hospitalized with severe lower respiratory tract infection in Cape Town, South Africa (2012-2013)
title_fullStr The burden of human coronavirus infection in children hospitalized with severe lower respiratory tract infection in Cape Town, South Africa (2012-2013)
title_full_unstemmed The burden of human coronavirus infection in children hospitalized with severe lower respiratory tract infection in Cape Town, South Africa (2012-2013)
title_short The burden of human coronavirus infection in children hospitalized with severe lower respiratory tract infection in Cape Town, South Africa (2012-2013)
title_sort burden of human coronavirus infection in children hospitalized with severe lower respiratory tract infection in cape town south africa 2012 2013
topic Maternal and Child Health
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36506
work_keys_str_mv AT aliyuabdulmumunisamuel theburdenofhumancoronavirusinfectioninchildrenhospitalizedwithseverelowerrespiratorytractinfectionincapetownsouthafrica20122013
AT aliyuabdulmumunisamuel burdenofhumancoronavirusinfectioninchildrenhospitalizedwithseverelowerrespiratorytractinfectionincapetownsouthafrica20122013