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Systematic Literature Review of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Laboratory Testing Practices and Incidence in United States Infants and Children5 Years of Age

Authors :
Naimisha Movva
Mina Suh
Lauren C Bylsma
Jon P Fryzek
Christopher B Nelson
Source :
The Journal of infectious diseases. 226(Suppl 2)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) can cause serious illness in those aged Methods Studies of RSV, medically attended RSV lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs), and bronchiolitis were identified using standard methodology. Outcomes were clinical decisions to test for RSV, testing frequency, and testing incidence proportions in inpatient (IP), emergency department (ED), outpatient (OP), and urgent care settings. Results Eighty good-/fair-quality studies, which reported data from the period 1988–2020, were identified. Twenty-seven described the clinical decision to test, which varied across and within settings. Two studies reported RSV testing frequency for multiple settings, with higher testing proportions in IP (n = 2, range: 83%–85%, 1996–2009) compared with ED (n = 1, 25%, 2006–2009) and OP (n = 2, 15%–25%, 1996–2009). Higher RSV testing incidence proportions were observed among LRTI infant populations in the ED (n = 1, 74%, 2007–2008) and OP (n = 2, 54%–69%, 1995–2008). Incidence proportions in LRTI populations were not consistently higher in the IP setting (n = 13). Across studies and time, there was heterogeneity in RSV testing patterns, which may reflect varying detection methods, populations, locations, time periods, and healthcare settings. Conclusions Not all infants and children with LRTI are tested for RSV, highlighting underestimation of RSV burden across all settings.

Details

ISSN :
15376613
Volume :
226
Issue :
Suppl 2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of infectious diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b2948c6dc6dcf5224b24c2df2276a21