Enhanced surveillance for serious complications of influenza in children: role of the Australian Paediatric Surveillance Unit.

Yvonne A Zurynski, David Lester-Smith, Marino S Festa, Alison M Kesson, Robert Booy, Elizabeth J Elliott
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Abstract

Influenza contributes significantly to disease burden among children aged less than five years. Existing influenza surveillance systems do not provide detailed data on clinical presentation, management, vaccination status, risk factors and complications in hospitalised children, or link such data with laboratory results. Following a number of child deaths due to influenza in 2007, the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing approached the Australian Paediatric Surveillance Unit (APSU) to examine the feasibility of enhancing APSU surveillance to identify children hospitalised with severe complications of influenza. Active, national, weekly surveillance was conducted during September 2007 with reporting by 1,256 Australian paediatricians working in hospitals and outpatient settings. The weekly report card return rate was 93%; detailed clinical data were provided on 88% of all notified cases and 15 children met the case criteria for severe complications of influenza. Admission to hospital occurred within 48 hours of onset of symptoms in over half of the children, of whom 13 had influenza A and two had influenza B, confirmed mostly by polymerase chain reaction on nasopharyngeal aspirate. Serious complications included pneumonia, presumed viral (67%), secondary bacterial infection, shock, cardiomyopathy, myocarditis and hypoglycaemia. No child aged six months or older had been vaccinated against influenza, including three children with underlying chronic conditions. No eligible child received an antiviral agent for influenza. Length of hospital stay ranged from 2 to 34 days; four children were admitted to a Paediatric Intensive Care Unit and one was ventilated. This study demonstrates the feasibility of using the established APSU mechanism for enhanced emergency surveillance during disease outbreaks, emergence or importation.

加强对儿童严重流感并发症的监测:澳大利亚儿科监测股的作用。
流感大大增加了五岁以下儿童的疾病负担。现有的流感监测系统没有提供关于住院儿童的临床表现、管理、疫苗接种状况、危险因素和并发症的详细数据,也没有将这些数据与实验室结果联系起来。在2007年一些儿童因流感死亡之后,澳大利亚政府卫生和老龄部与澳大利亚儿科监测股联系,审查加强儿科监测股监测以查明因严重流感并发症住院的儿童的可行性。2007年9月期间进行了积极的全国性每周监测,在医院和门诊机构工作的1 256名澳大利亚儿科医生报告了情况。周报告卡回收率为93%;88%的报告病例提供了详细的临床数据,15名儿童符合严重流感并发症的病例标准。半数以上的儿童在出现症状后48小时内入院,其中13人患有甲型流感,2人患有乙型流感,主要通过鼻咽吸气时的聚合酶链反应确诊。严重并发症包括肺炎、推测的病毒性感染(67%)、继发性细菌感染、休克、心肌病、心肌炎和低血糖。没有6个月或以上的儿童接种过流感疫苗,包括3名患有潜在慢性疾病的儿童。没有符合条件的儿童接受流感抗病毒药物治疗。住院时间为2至34天;四名儿童被送入儿科重症监护室,一名儿童接受了通气治疗。本研究表明,在疾病暴发、出现或输入期间,利用已建立的APSU机制加强紧急监测是可行的。
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