Abstract

BackgroundAcute lower respiratory illness is the most common cause of death among children, globally. Data are not available to make accurate estimates on the global mortality from respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), specifically.MethodsRespiratory samples collected from children under 5 years of age during 2004 to 2008 as part of population-based respiratory disease surveillance in an urban community in Dhaka, Bangladesh were tested for RSV, human metapneumovirus (HMPV), human parainfluenza virus (PIV) types 1, 2, and 3, influenza and adenovirus by RT-PCR. Verbal autopsy data were used to identify children who died from respiratory illness in a nearby rural community. Significance of the correlation between detections and community respiratory deaths was determined using Spearman's coefficient.ResultsRSV activity occurred during defined periods lasting approximately three months but with no clear seasonal pattern. There was no significant correlation between respiratory deaths and detection of any of the respiratory viruses studied.ConclusionOutbreaks of respiratory viruses may not be associated with deaths in children in the study site; however, the few respiratory deaths observed and community-to-community variation in the timing of outbreaks may have obscured an association. An accurate assessment of respiratory virus-associated deaths will require detections and death data to come from the same location and a larger study population.

Highlights

  • Acute lower respiratory illness (ALRI), pneumonia, is the most common cause of death among children, globally [1]

  • Estimates of agentspecific respiratory deaths, including those associated with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), based on extrapolations from mortality in hospitalized children are of uncertain reliability [1]

  • Annual data suggests RSV activity occurred during defined periods lasting approximately three months with no clear seasonal pattern

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Summary

Introduction

Acute lower respiratory illness (ALRI), pneumonia, is the most common cause of death among children, globally [1]. Many pneumonia-related deaths occur outside of hospitals, resulting in underestimation from hospitalbased studies [3]. Estimates of agentspecific respiratory deaths, including those associated with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), based on extrapolations from mortality in hospitalized children are of uncertain reliability [1]. The best and most recent estimate suggests that RSV causes up to 200,000 ALRI deaths in young children each year [6]. Acute lower respiratory illness is the most common cause of death among children, globally. Data are not available to make accurate estimates on the global mortality from respiratory syncytial virus (RSV),

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