Abstract

BackgroundPublished data on influenza in severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) patients are limited. We conducted SARI surveillance in central China and estimated hospitalization rates of SARI attributable to influenza by viral type/subtype.MethodsSurveillance was conducted at four hospitals in Jingzhou, China from 2010 to 2012. We enrolled hospitalized patients who had temperature ≥37·3°C and at least one of: cough, sore throat, tachypnea, difficulty breathing, abnormal breath sounds on auscultation, sputum production, hemoptysis, chest pain, or chest radiograph consistent with pneumonia. A nasopharyngeal swab was collected from each case-patient within 24 hours of admission for influenza testing by real-time reverse transcription PCR.ResultsOf 17 172 SARI patients enrolled, 90% were aged <15 years. The median duration of hospitalization was 5 days. Of 16 208 (94%) SARI cases tested, 2057 (13%) had confirmed influenza, including 1427 (69%) aged <5 years. Multiple peaks of influenza occurred during summer, winter, and spring months. Influenza was associated with an estimated 115 and 142 SARI hospitalizations per 100 000 during 2010–2011 and 2011–2012 [including A(H3N2): 55 and 44 SARI hospitalizations per 100 000; pandemic A(H1N1): 33 SARI hospitalizations per 100 000 during 2010–2011; influenza B: 26 and 98 hospitalizations per 100 000], with the highest rate among children aged 6–11 months (3603 and 3805 hospitalizations per 100 000 during 2010–2011 and 2011–2012, respectively).ConclusionsIn central China, influenza A and B caused a substantial number of hospitalizations during multiple periods each year. Our findings strongly suggest that young children should be the highest priority group for annual influenza vaccination in China.

Highlights

  • Published data on influenza in severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) patients are limited

  • Influenza surveillance has focused on outpatient visits for influenza-like illness (ILI; defined as temperature ≥38°C with either cough or sore throat and no alternative diagnosis) and, among those with ILI, the proportion with laboratory-confirmed influenza, stratified by viral type/subtype.[1]

  • The vast majority (90%) of SARI cases were in children aged

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Summary

Introduction

Published data on influenza in severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) patients are limited. We conducted SARI surveillance in central China and estimated hospitalization rates of SARI attributable to influenza by viral type/subtype. Influenza surveillance has focused on outpatient visits for influenza-like illness (ILI; defined as temperature ≥38°C with either cough or sore throat and no alternative diagnosis) and, among those with ILI, the proportion with laboratory-confirmed influenza, stratified by viral type/subtype.[1] Influenza surveillance in outpatients has informed current understanding about the seasonality and characteristics of influenza viruses, data that have helped determine the timing and composition of annual influenza vaccination.[2] Recently, the World Health Organization (WHO) has recommended that influenza surveillance include sentinel surveillance for severe acute respiratory infection (SARI),. The rationale is that severe outcomes of influenza have the greatest public health and economic impact and that identifying risk factors for severe illness informs vaccine policy

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