TY - JOUR
T1 - Paediatric acute hepatitis of unknown aetiology: a national investigation and adenoviraemia case-control study in the UK
AU - Mandal, Sema
AU - Simmons, Ruth
AU - Ireland, Georgina
AU - Charlett, Andre
AU - Desai, Monica
AU - Coughlan, Laura
AU - Powell, Annabel
AU - Leeman, David
AU - Williams, Christopher
AU - Neill, Claire
AU - O'Leary, Maureen C
AU - Sawyer, Clare
AU - Rowley, Frances
AU - Harris, Caroline
AU - Houlihan, Catherine
AU - Gordon, Claire
AU - Rampling, Tommy
AU - Callaby, Helen
AU - Hoschler, Katja
AU - Cogdale, Jade
AU - Renz, Erik
AU - Sebastianpilli, Praveen
AU - Thompson, Catherine
AU - Talts, Tiina
AU - Celma, Cristina
AU - Davies, Emma A.
AU - Ahmad, Shazaad
AU - Machin, Nicholas
AU - Gifford, Laura
AU - Moore, Catherine
AU - Dickson, Elizabeth M
AU - Divala, Titus H.
AU - Henderson, David
AU - Li, Kathy
AU - Broadbent, Philip
AU - Ushiro-Lumb, Ines
AU - Humphreys, Clare
AU - Grammatikopoulos, Tassos
AU - Hartley, Jane
AU - Kelgeri, Chayarani
AU - Rajwal, Sanjay
AU - Okike, Ifeanyichukwu
AU - Kelly, Deirdre A.
AU - Guiver, Malcolm
AU - Borrow, Ray
AU - Bindra, Renu
AU - Demirjian, Alicia
AU - Brown, Kevin E.
AU - Ladhani, Shamez N
AU - Ramsay, Mary E
AU - Bradley, Declan T.
AU - Gjini, Ardiana
AU - Roy, Kirsty
AU - Chand, Meera
AU - Zambon, Maria
AU - Watson, Conall H.
PY - 2023/11
Y1 - 2023/11
N2 - BackgroundAn increase in acute severe hepatitis of unknown aetiology in previously healthy children in the UK in March, 2022, triggered global case-finding. We aimed to describe UK epidemiological investigations of cases and their possible causes.MethodsWe actively surveilled unexplained paediatric acute hepatitis (transaminase >500 international units per litre) in children younger than 16 years presenting since Jan 1, 2022, through notifications from paediatricians, microbiologists, and paediatric liver units; we collected demographic, clinical, and exposure information. Then, we did a case-control study to investigate the association between adenoviraemia and other viruses and case-status using multivariable Firth penalised logistic regression. Cases aged 1–10 years and tested for adenovirus were included and compared with controls (ie, children admitted to hospital with an acute non-hepatitis illness who had residual blood samples collected between Jan 1 and May 28, 2022, and without known laboratory-confirmed diagnosis or previous adenovirus testing). Controls were frequency-matched on sex, age band, sample months, and nation or supra-region with randomised selection. We explored temporal associations between frequency of circulating viruses identified through routine laboratory pathogen surveillance and occurrence of cases by linear regression. SARS-CoV-2 seropositivity of cases was examined against residual serum from age-matched clinical comparison groups.FindingsBetween Jan 1 and July 4, 2022, 274 cases were identified (median age 3 years [IQR 2–5]). 131 (48%) participants were male, 142 (52%) were female, and one ( < 1%) participant had sex data unknown. Jaundice (195 [83%] of 235) and gastrointestinal symptoms (202 [91%] of 222) were common. 15 (5%) children required liver transplantation and none died. Adenovirus was detected in 172 (68%) of 252 participants tested, regardless of sample type; 137 (63%) of 218 samples were positive for adenovirus in the blood. For cases that were successfully genotyped, 58 (81%) of 72 had Ad41F, and 57 were identified as positive via blood samples (six of these were among participants who had undergone a transplant). In the case-control analysis, adenoviraemia was associated with hepatitis case-status (adjusted OR 37·4 [95% CI 15·5–90·3]). Increases in the detection of adenovirus from faecal samples, but not other infectious agents, in routine laboratory pathogen surveillance correlated with hepatitis cases 4 weeks later, which independently suggested an association (β 0·06 [95% CI 0·02–0·11]). No association was identified for SARS-CoV-2 antibody seropositivity.InterpretationWe observed an association between adenovirus 41F viraemia and paediatric acute hepatitis. These results can inform diagnostic testing recommendations, clinical management, and exploratory in vitro or clinical studies of paediatric acute hepatitis of unknown aetiology. The role of potential co-factors, including other viruses and host susceptibility, requires further investigation.
AB - BackgroundAn increase in acute severe hepatitis of unknown aetiology in previously healthy children in the UK in March, 2022, triggered global case-finding. We aimed to describe UK epidemiological investigations of cases and their possible causes.MethodsWe actively surveilled unexplained paediatric acute hepatitis (transaminase >500 international units per litre) in children younger than 16 years presenting since Jan 1, 2022, through notifications from paediatricians, microbiologists, and paediatric liver units; we collected demographic, clinical, and exposure information. Then, we did a case-control study to investigate the association between adenoviraemia and other viruses and case-status using multivariable Firth penalised logistic regression. Cases aged 1–10 years and tested for adenovirus were included and compared with controls (ie, children admitted to hospital with an acute non-hepatitis illness who had residual blood samples collected between Jan 1 and May 28, 2022, and without known laboratory-confirmed diagnosis or previous adenovirus testing). Controls were frequency-matched on sex, age band, sample months, and nation or supra-region with randomised selection. We explored temporal associations between frequency of circulating viruses identified through routine laboratory pathogen surveillance and occurrence of cases by linear regression. SARS-CoV-2 seropositivity of cases was examined against residual serum from age-matched clinical comparison groups.FindingsBetween Jan 1 and July 4, 2022, 274 cases were identified (median age 3 years [IQR 2–5]). 131 (48%) participants were male, 142 (52%) were female, and one ( < 1%) participant had sex data unknown. Jaundice (195 [83%] of 235) and gastrointestinal symptoms (202 [91%] of 222) were common. 15 (5%) children required liver transplantation and none died. Adenovirus was detected in 172 (68%) of 252 participants tested, regardless of sample type; 137 (63%) of 218 samples were positive for adenovirus in the blood. For cases that were successfully genotyped, 58 (81%) of 72 had Ad41F, and 57 were identified as positive via blood samples (six of these were among participants who had undergone a transplant). In the case-control analysis, adenoviraemia was associated with hepatitis case-status (adjusted OR 37·4 [95% CI 15·5–90·3]). Increases in the detection of adenovirus from faecal samples, but not other infectious agents, in routine laboratory pathogen surveillance correlated with hepatitis cases 4 weeks later, which independently suggested an association (β 0·06 [95% CI 0·02–0·11]). No association was identified for SARS-CoV-2 antibody seropositivity.InterpretationWe observed an association between adenovirus 41F viraemia and paediatric acute hepatitis. These results can inform diagnostic testing recommendations, clinical management, and exploratory in vitro or clinical studies of paediatric acute hepatitis of unknown aetiology. The role of potential co-factors, including other viruses and host susceptibility, requires further investigation.
U2 - 10.1016/s2352-4642(23)00215-8
DO - 10.1016/s2352-4642(23)00215-8
M3 - Article
SN - 2352-4642
VL - 7
SP - 786
EP - 796
JO - The Lancet Child and Adolescent Health
JF - The Lancet Child and Adolescent Health
IS - 11
ER -