Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (Nov 2023)

A 7-Year Survey (2015–2021) in One Pediatric Hospital (Brasov, Romania) on Rotavirus Gastroenteritis Specified as Community- or Hospital-Acquired Infection in Young Children

  • Ioana Arbanas,
  • Vlad Monescu,
  • Niculina Dragomir,
  • Larisa Diana Sauciuc,
  • Emanuela Cojocaru,
  • Katalin Csutak,
  • Bianca Elena Popovici,
  • Pandaru Andreea,
  • Spirea Elena-Daniela,
  • Raluca-Ileana Lixandru,
  • Laura Bleotu,
  • Oana Falup-Pecurariu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8120509
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 12
p. 509

Abstract

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This project is an observational, descriptive study evaluating frequencies of rotavirus disease in hospitalized children aged less than 5 years old between 2015 and 2021 in the Pediatric Hospital of Brasov, Central Romania. The study compares socio-demographic (age, sex, place of living and ethnicity), clinical, and treatment aspects between community-acquired rotavirus gastroenteritis (CARG) and hospital-acquired rotavirus gastroenteritis (HARG). During that period, 1913 hospitalized children had a rapid positive immunichromatographic rotavirus test from stool specimens. Among them, 1620 (84.6%) were CARG and 293 (15.4%) were HARG. CARG conditions represented 28.5% of all acute hospitalized gastroenteritis (n = 5673) whereas HARG represented 5.2%. Around the same percentage of urban children were seen in CARG as in HARG (58.5% (n = 948) for CARG and 56.3% (n = 164) for HARG). About 64.9% (n = 1052) of CARG cases were from Roma population, and 66.5% (n = 195) in HARG. The age group with the highest frequency of the disease was 12 to 24 months old for both CARG and HARG. The average hospital duration was 5.09 days for CARG and 7.62 days for HARG. Diarrhea was the principal symptom in both CARG and HARG (92.6% (n = 1500) for CARG and 93.9% (n = 275) for HARG). Most CARG patients (61% (n = 989)) were treated for symptomatic management with iv fluids. Most HARG (60.4% (n = 177)) were treated for symptomatic management with iv fluids and antibiotics. A significant seasonal shift to a later period in the year was observed during the last registration year of 2021, possibly due to the COVID-19 epidemic. The seasonal disease burden of rotavirus infection in children remains high in hospital care in Romania, which may justify the systematic introduction of rotavirus vaccination across the whole country.

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