Abstract

Viral upper respiratory tract infection (URTI) predisposes to bacterial pneumonia possibly by facilitating growth of bacteria such as Streptococcus pneumoniae colonising the nasopharynx. We investigated whether viral URTI is temporally associated with an increase in nasopharyngeal pneumococcal concentration. Episodes of symptomatic RSV or rhinovirus URTI among children <5 years were identified from a longitudinal household study in rural Kenya. lytA and alu PCR were performed on nasopharyngeal samples collected twice-weekly, to measure the pneumococcal concentration adjusted for the concentration of human DNA present. Pneumococcal concentration increased with a fold-change of 3.80 (95%CI 1.95–7.40), with acquisition of RSV or rhinovirus, during 51 URTI episodes among 42 children. In repeated swabs from the baseline period, in the two weeks before URTI developed, within-episode variation was broad; within +/−112-fold range of the geometric mean. We observed only a small increase in nasopharyngeal pneumococcal concentration during RSV or rhinovirus URTI, relative to natural variation. Other factors, such as host response to viral infection, may be more important than nasopharyngeal pneumococcal concentration in determining risk of invasive disease.

Highlights

  • Pneumonia is the leading cause of death in children

  • The association between viral upper respiratory tract infection (URTI) and pneumococcal pneumonia would be explained if viral URTI increased the concentration of pneumococcus in the nasopharynx and in turn this increased the risk of pneumococcal invasion or aspiration, leading to disease

  • We summarized the data for each episode of viral URTI studied by calculating the mean natural log pneumococcal concentration (i) before (ii) during and (iii) after viral infection and the difference in these means

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Summary

Introduction

Pneumonia is the leading cause of death in children

Methods
Results
Conclusion

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