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Change in age profile of respiratory syncytial virus disease over the course of annual epidemics: a multi-national study

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-10, 00:37 authored by Saverio Caini, Jean-Sebastien Casalegno, Ana Paula Rodrigues, Vernon Lee, Cheryl Cohen, Qiu Sue Huang, Alfredo Bruno Caicedo, Anne Teirlinck, Raquel Guiomar, Li Wei Ang, Jocelyn Moyes, Tim Wood, Doménica de Mora, Mathieu Bangert, VRS Study Group in Lyon, Rolf Kramer, Lisa Staadegaard, Jojanneke van Summeren, Adam Meijer, John Paget

Objectives:

We aimed to study whether the percentwise age distribution of RSV cases changes over time during annual epidemics.

Methods:

We used surveillance data (2008–2019) from the Netherlands, Lyon (France), Portugal, Singapore, Ecuador, South Africa, and New Zealand. In each country, every season was divided into “epidemic quarters”, i.e. periods corresponding to each quartile of RSV cases. Multinomial logistic regression models were fitted to evaluate whether the likelihood of RSV cases being aged <1 or ≥5 years (vs. 1 to <5) changed over time within a season.

Results:

In all countries, RSV cases were significantly more likely to be aged <1 year in the 4th vs. 1st epidemic quarter; the relative risk ratio [RRR] ranged between 1.35 and 2.56. Likewise, RSV cases were significantly more likely to be aged ≥5 years in the 4th vs. 1st epidemic quarter (except in Singapore); the RRR ranged from 1.75 to 6.70. The results did not change when stratifying by level of care or moving the lower cut-off to 6 months.

Conclusions:

The age profile of RSV cases shifts within a season, with infants and adolescents, adults, and the elderly constituting a higher proportion of cases in the later phases of annual epidemics. These findings may have implications for RSV prevention policies with newly approved vaccines.

Funding

Sanofi/AstraZeneca

History

Submitter

Salila Bryant

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