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Global Burden of Acute Lower Respiratory Infection Associated With Human Metapneumovirus in Children Under 5 Years in 2018: A Systematic Review and Modelling Study Publisher Pubmed



Wang X1 ; Li Y1 ; Deloriaknoll M2 ; Madhi SA3, 4 ; Cohen C6, 7 ; Ali A8 ; Basnet S9, 10 ; Bassat Q11, 12, 13, 14, 15 ; Brooks WA2 ; Chittaganpitch M16 ; Echavarria M17 ; Fasce RA18 ; Goswami D19 ; Hirve S20 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Wang X1
  2. Li Y1
  3. Deloriaknoll M2
  4. Madhi SA3, 4
  5. Cohen C6, 7
  6. Ali A8
  7. Basnet S9, 10
  8. Bassat Q11, 12, 13, 14, 15
  9. Brooks WA2
  10. Chittaganpitch M16
  11. Echavarria M17
  12. Fasce RA18
  13. Goswami D19
  14. Hirve S20
  15. Homaira N19, 21
  16. Howie SRC22, 23
  17. Kotloff KL24
  18. Khuribulos N25
  19. Krishnan A26
  20. Lucero MG27
  21. Lupisan S27
  22. Miraiglesias A28
  23. Moore DP3, 5
  24. Moraleda C11, 29
  25. Nunes M3, 4
  26. Oshitani H30
  27. Owor BE31
  28. Polack FP32
  29. Obrien KL2
  30. Rasmussen ZA33
  31. Rath BA34
  32. Salimi V35
  33. Scott JAG31, 36, 37
  34. Simoes EAF38
  35. Strand TA10, 39
  36. Thea DM40
  37. Treurnicht FK6, 7
  38. Vaccari LC1
  39. Yoshida LM41
  40. Zar HJ42
  41. Campbell H1
  42. Nair H1

Source: The Lancet Global Health Published:2021


Abstract

Background: Human metapneumovirus is a common virus associated with acute lower respiratory infections (ALRIs) in children. No global burden estimates are available for ALRIs associated with human metapneumovirus in children, and no licensed vaccines or drugs exist for human metapneumovirus infections. We aimed to estimate the age-stratified human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI global incidence, hospital admissions, and mortality burden in children younger than 5 years. Methods: We estimated the global burden of human metapneumovirus-associated ALRIs in children younger than 5 years from a systematic review of 119 studies published between Jan 1, 2001, and Dec 31, 2019, and a further 40 high quality unpublished studies. We assessed risk of bias using a modified Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. We estimated incidence, hospital admission rates, and in-hospital case-fatality ratios (hCFRs) of human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI using a generalised linear mixed model. We applied incidence and hospital admission rates of human metapneumovirus–associated ALRI to population estimates to yield the morbidity burden estimates by age bands and World Bank income levels. We also estimated human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI in-hospital deaths and overall human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI deaths (both in-hospital and non-hospital deaths). Additionally, we estimated human metapneumovirus-attributable ALRI cases, hospital admissions, and deaths by combining human metapneumovirus-associated burden estimates and attributable fractions of human metapneumovirus in laboratory-confirmed human metapneumovirus cases and deaths. Findings: In 2018, among children younger than 5 years globally, there were an estimated 14·2 million human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI cases (uncertainty range [UR] 10·2 million to 20·1 million), 643 000 human metapneumovirus-associated hospital admissions (UR 425 000 to 977 000), 7700 human metapneumovirus-associated in-hospital deaths (2600 to 48 800), and 16 100 overall (hospital and community) human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI deaths (5700 to 88 000). An estimated 11·1 million ALRI cases (UR 8·0 million to 15·7 million), 502 000 ALRI hospital admissions (UR 332 000 to 762 000), and 11 300 ALRI deaths (4000 to 61 600) could be causally attributed to human metapneumovirus in 2018. Around 58% of the hospital admissions were in infants under 12 months, and 64% of in-hospital deaths occurred in infants younger than 6 months, of which 79% occurred in low-income and lower-middle-income countries. Interpretation: Infants younger than 1 year have disproportionately high risks of severe human metapneumovirus infections across all World Bank income regions and all child mortality settings, similar to respiratory syncytial virus and influenza virus. Infants younger than 6 months in low-income and lower-middle-income countries are at greater risk of death from human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI than older children and those in upper-middle-income and high-income countries. Our mortality estimates demonstrate the importance of intervention strategies for infants across all settings, and warrant continued efforts to improve the outcome of human metapneumovirus-associated ALRI among young infants in low-income and lower-middle-income countries. Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license
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