Jornal de Pediatria (May 2021)

Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) during SARS-CoV-2 pandemic in Brazil: a multicenter, prospective cohort study

  • Fernanda Lima-Setta,
  • Maria Clara de Magalhães-Barbosa,
  • Gustavo Rodrigues-Santos,
  • Elaine Augusta das Neves Figueiredo,
  • Melissa de Lorena Jacques,
  • Raquel de Seixas Zeitel,
  • Roberto Sapolnik,
  • Cibelle Teixeira da Siva Borges,
  • Vanessa Soares Lanziotti,
  • Roberta Esteves Vieira de Castro,
  • Ana Paula Novaes Bellinat,
  • Thiago Peres da Silva,
  • Felipe Rezende Caino de Oliveira,
  • Bárbara Carvalho Santos dos Reis,
  • Natália Almeida de Arnaldo Silva Rodriguez Castro,
  • João Henrique Garcia Cobas Macedo,
  • Ana Carolina Cabral Pinheiro Scarlato,
  • Paula Marins Riveiro,
  • Isabele Coelho Fonseca da Mota,
  • Vivian Botelho Lorenzo,
  • Natalia Martins Lima de Lucena,
  • Zina Maria Almeida de Azevedo,
  • Antonio José L.A. Cunha,
  • Arnaldo Prata-Barbosa

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 97, no. 3
pp. 354 – 361

Abstract

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Objective: To describe the clinical, laboratory, and radiological characteristics, as well as the outcomes of children with MIS-C. Method: Multicenter, prospective cohort study, conducted in 17 pediatric intensive care units in five states in Brazil, from March to July 2020. Patients from 1 month to 19 years who met the MIS-C diagnostic criteria were included consecutively. Results: Fifty-six patients were included, with the following conditions: Kawasaki-like disease (n = 26), incomplete Kawasaki disease (n = 16), acute cardiac dysfunction (n = 10), toxic shock syndrome (n = 3), and macrophage activation syndrome (n = 1). Median age was 6.2 years (IQR 2.4−10.3), 70% were boys, 59% were non-whites, 20% had comorbidities, 48% reported a contact with COVID-19 cases, and 55% had a recent SARS-CoV-2 infection confirmed by RT-PCR and/or serology. Gastrointestinal symptoms were present in 71%, shock symptoms in 59%, and severe respiratory symptoms in less than 20%. d-Dimer was increased in 80% and cardiac dysfunction markers in more than 75%. Treatment included immunoglobulin (89%); corticosteroids, antibiotics, and enoxaparin in about 50%; and oseltamivir and antifungal therapy in less than 10%. Only 11% needed invasive mechanical ventilation, with a median duration of five days (IQR 5–6.5). The median length of PICU stay was six days (IQR 5–11), and one death occurred (1.8%). Conclusions: Most characteristics of the present MIS-C patients were similar to that of other cohorts. The present results may contribute to a broader understanding of SARS-CoV-2 infection in children and its short-term consequences. Long-term multidisciplinary follow-up is needed, since it is not known whether these patients will have chronic cardiac impairment or other sequelae.

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