Prevalence of Rotavirus, Adenovirus, Norovirus, and Astrovirus Infections and Coinfections among Hospitalized Children in Northern France

Author:

Tran Adissa1,Talmud Déborah234,Lejeune Benoît5,Jovenin Nicolas6,Renois Fanny23,Payan Christopher1,Leveque Nicolas23,Andreoletti Laurent23

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire de Virologie, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Brest, EA 3882, UFR Médecine, Brest

2. Laboratoire de Virologie, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Reims, Reims

3. IFR 53/EA-4303, Faculté de Médecine de Reims, Reims

4. Service de Pédiatrie A, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Reims, Reims

5. Service de Santé Publique et d'Hygiène Hospitalière, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Brest-Cellule Régionale d'Epidémiologie Nosocomiale (CRENO), Brest

6. Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Reims et Centre Godinot de Lutte contre le Cancer, Reims, France

Abstract

ABSTRACT From January to December 2007, 973 stool specimens were prospectively collected from children hospitalized for gastroenteritis signs or from neonates and premature cases who were born in two French hospital settings in the north of France. They were tested by rapid enzyme immunoassay (EIA) analyses for rotavirus and adenovirus and by two commercially available ELISA tests for the detection of norovirus and astrovirus. The overall rates of prevalence for rotavirus, norovirus, adenovirus, and astrovirus were 21, 13, 5, and 1.8%, respectively, and they did not significantly differ between the two hospital settings ( P = 0.12). Mixed virus infections were detected in 32 (3.3%) of the 973 study children and were associated with norovirus in 21 (66%) infants, including 5 premature cases. From fall to spring, norovirus infections accounted for 52% of documented gastroenteritidis viral infections at a time when rotavirus was epidemic, resulting in mixed norovirus and rotavirus gastrointestinal tract infections. Of the 367 documented viral gastroenteritis cases, 15 (4.1%) were identified as nosocomial infections, 5 of which occurred in premature cases. These findings highlight the need to implement norovirus and astrovirus ELISA detection assays in association with rapid EIA rotavirus and adenovirus detection assays for the clinical diagnosis and the nosocomial prevention of gastroenteritis viral infections in pediatric departments.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

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