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Olla Hamdan, Tess Stopczynski, Justin Z Amarin, Yasmeen Z Qwaider, Haya Hayek, Laura S Stewart, Rendie McHenry, Andrew J Spieker, James Chappell, Mary Wikswo, Sara Mirza, Natasha B Halasa, 1748. Viral and Bacterial Etiology of Acute Gastroenteritis in Children < 5 Years Old at a Major Pediatric Referral Center Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic, Open Forum Infectious Diseases, Volume 10, Issue Supplement_2, December 2023, ofad500.1579, https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.1579
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Abstract
In the United States, acute gastroenteritis (AGE) accounts for 1.5 million office visits, 200,000 hospitalizations, and 300 deaths in children each year. The specific etiology of AGE often remains unknown due to limited testing, including before and during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.
We analyzed data collected in the emergency department (ED) and inpatient (IP) settings at Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt University Medical Center as part of the CDC New Vaccine Surveillance Network (NVSN); a prospective population-based AGE surveillance study. Our analysis included children < 5 years of age presenting with vomiting (≥ 1 episode within 24 hours) or diarrhea (≥ 3 episodes within 24 hours) within 10 days prior to presentation and had a research stool specimen tested using xTAG® Gastrointestinal Pathogen Panel (Luminex). Our analysis included children with either bacterial or viral detection. Clostridioides difficile in children < 2 years of age was considered a colonization.

Demographic and clinical characteristics of children <5 years old who had a stool sample tested by xTAG® Gastrointestinal Pathogen Panel (N=1,043).

Monthly detection of viral (a) and bacterial (b) AGE pathogens from December 2016 to January 2023.
Viral pathogens remained the predominant etiology of AGE in young children during the COVID-19 pandemic. Reduction of AGE cases likely coincided with stay-at-home recommendations utilized and less gathering opportunities during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Natasha B. Halasa, MD, MPH, Merck: Grant/Research Support|Quidell: Grant/Research Support|Quidell: donation of kits|Sanofi: Grant/Research Support|Sanofi: vaccine support
Author notes
Session: 159. Pediatric Viral Studies
Friday, October 13, 2023: 12:15 PM
- patient referral
- gastroenteritis, acute
- adenoviruses
- diarrhea
- academic medical centers
- centers for disease control and prevention (u.s.)
- child
- demography
- disclosure
- emergency service, hospital
- hospitals, pediatric
- inpatients
- norovirus
- office visits
- parasites
- pediatrics
- rotavirus
- vaccines
- vomiting
- salmonella
- pathogenic organism
- surveillance, medical
- pandemics
- pathogenicity
- microbial colonization
- causality
- clostridium difficile
- stool specimen
- covid-19
- coronavirus pandemic
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