Author:
Burney Jennifer A.,DeHaan Laurel L.,Shimizu Chisato,Bainto Emelia V.,Newburger Jane W.,DeBiasi Roberta L.,Dominguez Samuel R.,Portman Michael A.,Melish Marian,Bratincsak Andras,Fabi Marianna,Corinaldesi Elena,Yu Jeong Jin,Gee Paul,Kitano Naomi,Tremoulet Adriana H.,Cayan Daniel R.,Burns Jane C.,Ansusinha Emily,Jone Pei-Ni,Hite Michelle,Heizer Heather R.,Anderson Marsha S.,Pavan Valentina,Andreozzi Laura,Gee Waverley,Suzuki Hiroyuki,
Abstract
AbstractIn a single-site study (San Diego, CA, USA), we previously showed that Kawasaki Disease (KD) cases cluster temporally in bursts of approximately 7 days. These clusters occurred more often than would be expected at random even after accounting for long-term trends and seasonality. This finding raised the question of whether other locations around the world experience similar temporal clusters of KD that might offer clues to disease etiology. Here we combine data from San Diego and nine additional sites around the world with hospitals that care for large numbers of KD patients, as well as two multi-hospital catchment regions. We found that across these sites, KD cases clustered at short time scales and there were anomalously long quiet periods with no cases. Both of these phenomena occurred more often than would be expected given local trends and seasonality. Additionally, we found unusually frequent temporal overlaps of KD clusters and quiet periods between pairs of sites. These findings suggest that regional and planetary range environmental influences create periods of higher or lower exposure to KD triggers that may offer clues to the etiology of KD.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
5 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献