Abstract
In spring 2022, a series of reports from the United Kingdom and the United States identified an increase in the incidence of acute severe hepatitis in children. The Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) collaborated with provincial/territorial health partners to investigate in Canada. Clinical hepatitis, or inflammation of the liver, is not reportable in Canada, so to determine if an increase was occurring above historical levels, the baseline incidence in Canada was estimated. This article estimates the pre-existing baseline incidence of acute severe hepatitis of unknown origin in children in Canada using administrative databases. It further summarizes the outbreak investigation using information from the national case report forms. A committee with representatives from PHAC and provincial/territorial health partners was established to investigate current cases in Canada. A national probable case definition and case report form were developed, and intentionally created to be highly sensitive to capture all potential cases for etiological investigations. To estimate a nationally representative baseline incidence, hospitalization data were extracted from the Discharge Abstract Database and was combined with data from Québec from the Ministère de la Santé et des Services sociaux. Twenty-eight probable cases of acute severe hepatitis of unknown origin in children were reported between October 1, 2021, to September 23, 2022, by six provinces: British Columbia=1; Alberta=5; Saskatchewan=1; Manitoba=3; Ontario=14; and Québec=4. The estimated national baseline incidence was an average of 70 cases annually, or 5.8 cases per month. There was no apparent increase above the estimated historical baseline levels.
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