BMC Medicine (Jul 2022)

Severe acute hepatitis of unknown aetiology in children—what is known?

  • Susan Khader,
  • Isabel Foster,
  • Andrew Dagens,
  • Alice Norton,
  • Louise Sigfrid

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12916-022-02471-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract The ongoing investigations into clusters of children affected by severe acute hepatitis of unknown aetiology have put our global capacity for a coordinated, effective response to the test. The global health community have rapidly convened to share data and inform the response. In the UK, where most cases were initially identified, a coordinated public health and clinical research response was rapidly initiated. Since then, cases have been reported from other countries, predominantly from higher-income countries. While agencies are keeping an open mind to the cause, the working hypothesis and case notifications raise important questions about our capacity to detect emerging cases in lower-resourced settings with a recognised lack of access to diagnostics even for commonly circulating viruses such as hepatitis A. The limited capability to generate integrated global pathogen surveillance data is a challenge for the outbreak investigations, highlighting an urgent need to strengthen access to diagnostics, with a focus on lower-resourced settings, to improve the capacity to detect emerging diseases to inform care and to improve outcomes and outbreak control.

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