Abstract

Context Children with cancer comprise an important immunocompromised population who are more vulnerable and at high-risk to a variety of infectious pathogens, including respiratory viruses that are widespread in the community. Objective Studying the role of these viruses is important especially in countries with high population density, increasing chances of community-acquired infections. This prospective study aimed to assess the annual prevalence of community-acquired respiratory viral infections among children with cancer presenting with clinical picture suggestive of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs), and evaluate its risk factors and prognosis. Design Patients who presented either to the out-patient clinic or to the emergency department, had clinical evidence and/or radiological criteria suggestive of LRTIs, and were fulfilling the criteria of community-acquired infection were recruited, subjected to clinical assessment, investigated through hematology panel, blood culture, chest X-ray, CT chest, and PCR for influenza A and B, parainfluenza (PIV) types 1 and 3 viruses, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), and prospectively followed up for the clinical outcome. Results Over a year, 90 eligible children were recruited; 48 patients had ALL, 9 had AML, and 33 had solid tumors; 54.4% of them were in the induction phase. Annual prevalence of viral infections was 37.7%, with a seasonal peak from April to May. The most frequently detected virus was influenza virus [type A (47%), type B (12%)] followed by parainfluenza virus [PIV1 (26%), PIV3 (15%)], and none had RSV. Bacteria were identified in 26 patients, fungi in four, mixed infections (bacterial/viral and bacterial/fungal) in 13, and 36 cases had unidentified etiology. The majority of patients with influenza and parainfluenza infections had haematological malignancy, presented with fever, and had mild self-limited respiratory illness. Five patients with mixed viral and bacterial infection had severe symptoms, necessitating ICU admission. Six patients died from infection-related sequelae; two had mixed PIV and staphylococcal infections. Conclusions Community-acquired influenza and parainfluenza infections are common in pediatrics children with malignancy, either as isolated or mixed viral/bacterial infections. Clinical suspicion is essential as radiological manifestations are non-specific and mandate rapid diagnosis and management to improve patients' outcome.

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