Abstract
Airway bacterial microbiota influences the prognosis in children with respiratory syncytial virus infection. The study aimed to investigate the effect of the airway-dominant bacterial microbiota on disease severity in children with pneumonia of respiratory syncytial virus infection. A retrospective study was conducted in the Children's Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, which involved a cohort of patients with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)-infected pneumonia from January 2012 to December 2021. Patients were assigned to a normal flora group or to a dominant flora group (with the top 5 individual bacteria) based on the nasopharyngeal aspirates culture and matched using propensity-score matching. Univariate analysis and multivariate analysis were performed to estimate the risk factors of poor prognosis in dominant flora. Five thousand five hundred and twelve patients in the normal flora and 4556 in the dominant flora were included ( Escherichia coli 514, Streptococcus pneumoniae 1516, Staphylococcus aureus 506, Moraxella catarrhalis 509 and Haemophilus influenzae 1516, respectively). The dominant flora had more patients developing severe pneumonia, needing mechanical ventilation/tracheal intubation (up to 15.8% in the S. aureus ) and admission to the intensive care unit (up to 4.5% in the E. coli ) than in the normal flora (28.5% vs. 25.9%; P = 0.001; 9.8% vs. 5.4%; P < 0.001; 2.0% vs. 1.2%; P <0.001). And the hospitalization was longer in the dominant flora than in the normal flora [8 (6-9) vs. 8 (7-9) days; P < 0.001], the E. coli and S. aureus had the longest hospitalization [8 (7-10) days]. Several factors were associated with critical illness in Dominant flora according to multivariate analysis ( P < 0.001), including age (OR: 0.965; CI: 0.954-0.976; P < 0.001), anhelation (OR: 0.530; CI: 0.446-0.631; P < 0.001), disorders of consciousness (OR: 0.055; CI: 0.016-0.185; P < 0.001) as well as assisted respiration (OR: 0.115; CI: 0.097-0.138; P < 0.001), C-reactive protein >10 mg/L (OR: 0.686; CI: 0.560-0.839; P < 0.001), SpO 2 <90% (OR: 0.366; CI: 0.214-0.628; P < 0.001), pulmonary consolidation (OR: 0.511; CI: 0.364-0.717; P < 0.001) and pulmonary atelectasis (OR: 0.362; CI: 0.236-0.555; P < 0.001). The airway-dominant bacterial microbiota influenced disease severity and comorbidities in children with RSV-infected pneumonia. Clinicians should pay attention to the nasopharyngeal aspirate culture, especially after detecting S. aureus and E. coli in RSV-infected children with pneumonia, closely observe the disease progression and take timely measures to avoid adverse outcomes.
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