TY - JOUR
T1 - Surge of lower respiratory tract group A streptococcal infections in England in winter 2022
T2 - epidemiology and clinical profile
AU - Wrenn, Katie
AU - Blomquist, Paula Bianca
AU - Inzoungou-Massanga, Carmellie
AU - Olufon, Oluwakemi
AU - Guy, Rebecca L.
AU - Hatziioanou, Diane
AU - Findlater, Lucy
AU - Smith, Iona
AU - Mirfenderesky, Mariyam
AU - Luyt, Karen
AU - Williams, Tom
AU - Stoianova, Sylvia
AU - Dickinson, Michelle
AU - Pietzsch, Maaike
AU - Jarvis, Christopher I.
AU - Brown, Colin
AU - Lamagni, Theresa
AU - Kumar, Deepti
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023/11/1
Y1 - 2023/11/1
N2 - BACKGROUND: Following low incidence of invasive group A streptococcal (iGAS) infections during the COVID-19 pandemic, marked increases were noted in many countries during 2022, particularly in children. In November 2022, severe presentations of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs), including empyema, were notified by clinicians across the UK. UKHSA investigated this rise with the aim of informing clinical management and public health response. METHODS: We undertook a case-series analysis using multiple routine data sources, exempted from ethics approval or patient consent. We identified iGAS cases in England in children younger than 15 years with an LRTI reported between Oct 1 and Dec 21, 2022, using UKHSA laboratory surveillance data (GAS detected in LRT specimens) and notifications by clinicians and Health Protection Teams (HPTs). Symptoms, diagnoses, health-care interactions, and outcome (death or recovery) data were obtained from HPT case management notes, the National Child Mortality Database, and the NHS Digital Emergency Care Dataset. FINDINGS: We identified 147 cases of LRTI iGAS in children across England (77 [52%] male, 70 [48%] female; median age 4 years [IQR 2-6]). Predominant ethnicities were White (74 [65%] of 113 with known ethnicity) and Asian (18 [16%] of 113). Most reported symptoms were fever (90 [75%] of 120 children with ≥1 symptom) and cough (60 [50%] of 120), and 71 (48%) of all 147 children had a diagnosed respiratory viral coinfection (most commonly hMPV and RSV). 127 (86%) of children attended an emergency department, 31% (n=36/114 with onset date) at least twice within 21 days after symptom onset. 37 (25%) of 147 children died, with a median time from symptom onset to death of 4 days (IQR 3-7). Of 32 children with sample dates, 16 (84%) were tested for GAS on or after the day they died. Over half of deaths (21 [57%] of 37 deaths) occurred in the community after rapid deterioration, of whom 18 had previous contact with health-care services documented. INTERPRETATION: The UK saw an unusual rise in iGAS LRTIs in children in late 2022. One in four cases died, over half in the community. Non-specific symptoms, viral symptoms, or positive virology might have lowered suspicion of bacterial infection. Although the use of multiple available data sources expedited the analysis, varying data completeness limited interpretation. Our study highlights the need for earlier detection and identification of effective measures to prevent death.None.
AB - BACKGROUND: Following low incidence of invasive group A streptococcal (iGAS) infections during the COVID-19 pandemic, marked increases were noted in many countries during 2022, particularly in children. In November 2022, severe presentations of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs), including empyema, were notified by clinicians across the UK. UKHSA investigated this rise with the aim of informing clinical management and public health response. METHODS: We undertook a case-series analysis using multiple routine data sources, exempted from ethics approval or patient consent. We identified iGAS cases in England in children younger than 15 years with an LRTI reported between Oct 1 and Dec 21, 2022, using UKHSA laboratory surveillance data (GAS detected in LRT specimens) and notifications by clinicians and Health Protection Teams (HPTs). Symptoms, diagnoses, health-care interactions, and outcome (death or recovery) data were obtained from HPT case management notes, the National Child Mortality Database, and the NHS Digital Emergency Care Dataset. FINDINGS: We identified 147 cases of LRTI iGAS in children across England (77 [52%] male, 70 [48%] female; median age 4 years [IQR 2-6]). Predominant ethnicities were White (74 [65%] of 113 with known ethnicity) and Asian (18 [16%] of 113). Most reported symptoms were fever (90 [75%] of 120 children with ≥1 symptom) and cough (60 [50%] of 120), and 71 (48%) of all 147 children had a diagnosed respiratory viral coinfection (most commonly hMPV and RSV). 127 (86%) of children attended an emergency department, 31% (n=36/114 with onset date) at least twice within 21 days after symptom onset. 37 (25%) of 147 children died, with a median time from symptom onset to death of 4 days (IQR 3-7). Of 32 children with sample dates, 16 (84%) were tested for GAS on or after the day they died. Over half of deaths (21 [57%] of 37 deaths) occurred in the community after rapid deterioration, of whom 18 had previous contact with health-care services documented. INTERPRETATION: The UK saw an unusual rise in iGAS LRTIs in children in late 2022. One in four cases died, over half in the community. Non-specific symptoms, viral symptoms, or positive virology might have lowered suspicion of bacterial infection. Although the use of multiple available data sources expedited the analysis, varying data completeness limited interpretation. Our study highlights the need for earlier detection and identification of effective measures to prevent death.None.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85177792406&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S0140-6736(23)02095-0
DO - 10.1016/S0140-6736(23)02095-0
M3 - Article
C2 - 37997140
AN - SCOPUS:85177792406
SN - 0140-6736
VL - 402
SP - S93
JO - The Lancet
JF - The Lancet
ER -