Microorganisms (Nov 2020)

Differences in Illness Severity among Circulating Norovirus Genotypes in a Large Pediatric Cohort with Acute Gastroenteritis

  • Sudha Bhavanam,
  • Stephen B. Freedman,
  • Bonita E. Lee,
  • Ran Zhuo,
  • Yuanyuan Qiu,
  • Linda Chui,
  • Jianling Xie,
  • Samina Ali,
  • Otto G. Vanderkooi,
  • Xiaoli L. Pang,
  • on behalf of the Alberta Provincial Pediatric Enteric Infection Team (APPETITE)

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms8121873
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 12
p. 1873

Abstract

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Norovirus is a major pathogen identified in children with acute gastroenteritis (AGE), little is known about the strain’s diversity and their clinical severity. Stool and/or rectal swabs were collected from children ≤18 years of age recruited at emergency departments (ED), and a provincial nursing advice phone line due to AGE symptoms in the province of Alberta, Canada between December 2014 and August 2018. Specimens were tested using a reverse transcription real time PCR and genotyped by Sanger sequencing. The Modified Vesikari Scale score (MVS) was used to evaluate the disease severity. The objectives are to identify the Genogroup and Genotype distribution and to compare illness severity between the GI and GII genogroups and to complete further analyses comparing the GII genotypes identified. GII.4 was the genotype most commonly identified. Children with GII.4 had higher MVS scores (12.0 (10.0, 14.0; p = 0.002)) and more prolonged diarrheal (5 days (3.0, 7.8)) and vomiting (3.2 days (1.7, 5.3; p < 0.001)) durations compared to other non GII.4 strains. The predominant strain varied by year with GII.4 Sydney[P31] predominant in 2014/15, GII.4 Sydney[P16] in 2015/16 and 2017/18, and GII.3[P12] in 2016/17. Genogroup II norovirus strains predominated in children with AGE with variance between years; clinical severity associated with different strains varied with episodes being most severe among GII.4 infected children.

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