Abstract
Background/Objectives: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the most common cause of bronchiolitis and pneumonia in infants and the leading cause of infant hospitalization in the U.S. and worldwide. The risk of experiencing at least one other medically attended lower respiratory tract infection (MA LRTI) following an infant RSV hospitalization is less studied. Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of infants who experienced an RSV hospitalization (index hospitalization) during infancy. The incidence rate of having a subsequent MA LRTI was reported. The association between a priori selected maternal and infant risk factors and subsequent MA LRTI was determined. Results: Of the 20,181 children who experienced an RSV hospitalization in infancy, 15% had at least one subsequent MA LRTI within the same RSV season. The incidence rates (95% confidence interval) of having a subsequent MA LRTI hospitalization, emergency department visit, or physician office visit in the same RSV season were 0.27 (0.26, 0.29), 0.16 (0.15, 0.17), and 0.46 (0.44, 0.48) per infant-year, respectively. Factors associated with an increased risk of subsequent MA-LRTI include younger maternal age, fewer years of maternal education, smoking during pregnancy, cesarean delivery, male infant sex, White race, siblings at home, urban residence, lower birth weight, lower gestational age, eligibility for and/or ever receiving palivizumab, longer birth hospitalization length of stay, longer index RSV hospitalization length of stay, intensive care unit admission for the index hospitalization, and summer-to-fall births. Conclusions: The burden of clinically significant subsequent MA-LRTI following an RSV hospitalization can be substantial. Our results highlight the importance of increasing accessible RSV LRTI preventive interventions.
Published Version
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