Abstract

* Abbreviations: COVID-19 — : coronavirus disease 2019 MIS-C — : multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children RBD — : receptor-binding domain S — : severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 spike protein SARS-Co-V-2 — : severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is arguably the most socially and economically disruptive pandemic since the 1918 influenza pandemic. Although pediatric COVID-19 shares features with the adult disease, there are several differences. Children produce virus in amounts at least equal to adults, if not higher,1 and can transmit the virus, just as adults can.2 School-aged children are generally less-severely affected than infants or adults, but some children without significant underlying disease become ill or die in a disease process analogous to the one most commonly seen in adults: severe pulmonary disease and respiratory failure.3–6 Children and adults appear to have different humoral immune responses to COVID-19.7 A small fraction of children with COVID-19 experience a hyperinflammatory process,8–13 termed multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) in the United States, with features distinct from Kawasaki disease.14 This case definition includes ≥2 of these symptoms: rash, conjunctivitis, or mucocutaneous inflammation; hypotension; cardiac disease; coagulopathy; or acute gastrointestinal problems.15 MIS-C, which is not correlated with viral load levels, typically appears some time after initial infection.13 MIS-C’s incidence is difficult to determine, given the high rate of asymptomatic infection.12 Adults with COVID-19 also can experience inflammatory disorders: coagulopathies, vasculitis, cardiomyositis, and neuroinflammatory processes.16–18 That the most effective therapy to reduce mortality in adults with severe COVID-19 yet established is an immune suppressant, dexamethasone,19 reveals the importance of inflammatory and immune-mediated pathologies. In this issue of … Address correspondence to Steven Zeichner, MD, PhD, Department of Pediatrics, University of Virginia, Box 801349, Charlottesville, VA 22908. E-mail: zeichner{at}virginia.edu

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