Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases (Mar 2015)

Clinical relevance of rhinovirus infections among adult hospitalized patients

  • Alberto Fica,
  • Jeannette Dabanch,
  • Winston Andrade,
  • Patricia Bustos,
  • Ita Carvajal,
  • Carolina Ceroni,
  • Vjera Triantafilo,
  • Marcelo Castro,
  • Rodrigo Fasce

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 2
pp. 118 – 124

Abstract

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Human rhinovirus (HRV) is an emerging viral pathogen. Aim: To characterize a group of patients admitted due to infection by this agent in a general hospital in Chile. Methods: Cases were identified by RT-PCR for 1 year through active surveillance of patients admitted with severe respiratory illness. Diagnosis was not available during hospitalization. Thirty-two cases were identified, 90% were ≥60 years old or had co-morbid conditions. Human rhinovirus-related admissions represented 23.7% of hospitalization due to severe acute respiratory infections among adults and ranked second to influenza (37.8%). Patients presented with pneumonia (68.8%), decompensated chronic lung conditions (21.9%), heart failure or influenza-like illness (6.3% each). Admission to intensive or intermediate care units was required by 31.2% and in-hospital mortality reached 12.5%. A CURB-65 score ≥3 was significantly associated to in-hospital mortality (p < 0.05). Most patients received antibiotics (90%). Conclusions: Human rhinovirus infections in elderly patients with co-morbid conditions are associated with hospitalizations, requiring critical or semi-critical antibiotics use. A high CURB-65 score was associated to in-hospital mortality. Keywords: Rhinovirus, Respiratory tract infections, Viral pneumonia, Reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, Adult, Hospitalization