Back to Search Start Over

Updated Guidance for Palivizumab Prophylaxis Among Infants and Young Children at Increased Risk of Hospitalization for Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infection

Authors :
H. Cody Meissner
Geoffrey L. Rosenthal
Jeffrey R. Starke
Richard L. Gorman
Joseph J. Zorc
Carrie L. Byington
Jennifer Frantz
Caryn Davidson
Marco Aurélio Palazzi Sáfadi
Jennifer S. Read
Michael J. Light
Mark H. Sawyer
Sinsi Hernandez-Cancio
Marc A. Fischer
Mark A. Brown
David W. Johnson
Henry H. Bernstein
Mobeen H. Rathore
Eneida A. Mendonça
Ian Nathanson
Dan L. Stewart
Yvonne Maldonado
Tina Q. Tan
Jane F. Seward
Geoffrey R. Simon
H. Dele Davies
Shawn L. Ralston
Michael T. Brady
Joseph A. Bocchini
Dennis L. Murray
Gordon E. Schutze
Joan L. Robinson
Rodney E. Willoughby
W. Robert Morrow
Anne Gadomski
Kieran J. Phelan
Mary Anne Jackson
Theoklis E. Zaoutis
Jill E. Baley
Stephen Sayles
Larry K. Pickering
Elizabeth Rosenblum
Brian Alverson
Bruce G. Gellin
David W. Kimberlin
Lucia H. Lee
Allan S. Lieberthal
R. Douglas Pratt
Nizar Maraqa
Kathryn M. Edwards
Danette Stanko-Lopp
Sarah S. Long
Walter A. Orenstein
Source :
Pediatrics. 134:415-420
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), 2014.

Abstract

Palivizumab was licensed in June 1998 by the Food and Drug Administration for the reduction of serious lower respiratory tract infection caused by respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in children at increased risk of severe disease. Since that time, the American Academy of Pediatrics has updated its guidance for the use of palivizumab 4 times as additional data became available to provide a better understanding of infants and young children at greatest risk of hospitalization attributable to RSV infection. The updated recommendations in this policy statement reflect new information regarding the seasonality of RSV circulation, palivizumab pharmacokinetics, the changing incidence of bronchiolitis hospitalizations, the effect of gestational age and other risk factors on RSV hospitalization rates, the mortality of children hospitalized with RSV infection, the effect of prophylaxis on wheezing, and palivizumab-resistant RSV isolates. This policy statement updates and replaces the recommendations found in the 2012 Red Book.

Details

ISSN :
10984275 and 00314005
Volume :
134
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c1fcc353ee753378d1f2fc4538788c26
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2014-1665