Abstract

The World Health Organization Pneumonia Expert Group (WHO-PEG) defined a standardized radiologic endpoint for childhood community-acquired alveolar pneumonia (RD-CAAP), as the most likely to be pneumococcal, not ruling out other bacteria or coinfecting viruses. We aimed to determine the characteristics associated with hospitalization among children <5 years old presenting to the pediatric emergency room (PER) with RD-CAAP. This study was a part of an ongoing prospective population-based surveillance on hospital visits for RD-CAAP. RD-CAAP was determined according to the WHO-PEG. The study was conducted in the prepneumococcal conjugate vaccine era (2004-2008). Of 24,432 episodes with chest radiographs, 3871)15.8%) were RD-CAAP: 2319 required hospitalization and 1552 were discharged (outpatients). Compared with outpatients, hospitalized children had lower temperature, peripheral white cell and absolute neutrophil counts and C reactive protein serum levels, but higher rates of hypoxemia, rhinorrhea, cough and respiratory virus detection. PER visits during the respiratory virus season presented a 1.83 times higher risk of hospitalization than visits during nonrespiratory season. Although RD-CAAP is most often a bacterial infection, the unique characteristics of those visiting the PER and subsequently hospitalized suggest a frequent involvement of respiratory viruses, potentially as viral-bacterial coinfections, compared with outpatients.

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