Looking Back on 50 Years of Literature to Understand the Potential Impact of Influenza on Extrapulmonary Medical Outcomes

Author:

Nealon Joshua12ORCID,Derqui Nieves13,de Courville Caroline1,Biering-Sørensen Tor45,Cowling Benjamin J2,Nair Harish6ORCID,Chaves Sandra S1

Affiliation:

1. Sanofi , Lyon , France

2. School of Public Health, University of Hong Kong , Hong Kong Special Administrative Region , China

3. Medical Research Council Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis, School of Public Health, Imperial College London , London , United Kingdom

4. Department of Cardiology, Copenhagen University Hospital–Herlev and Gentofte , Copenhagen , Denmark

5. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen , Denmark

6. Usher Institute, University of Edinburgh , Edinburgh , United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract We conducted a scoping review of the epidemiological literature from the past 50 years to document the contribution of influenza virus infection to extrapulmonary clinical outcomes. We identified 99 publications reporting 243 associations using many study designs, exposure and outcome definitions, and methods. Laboratory confirmation of influenza was used in only 28 (12%) estimates, mostly in case-control and self-controlled case series study designs. We identified 50 individual clinical conditions associated with influenza. The most numerous estimates were of cardiocirculatory diseases, neurological/neuromuscular diseases, and fetal/newborn disorders, with myocardial infarction the most common individual outcome. Due to heterogeneity, we could not generate summary estimates of effect size, but of 130 relative effect estimates, 105 (81%) indicated an elevated risk of extrapulmonary outcome with influenza exposure. The literature is indicative of systemic complications of influenza virus infection, the requirement for more effective influenza control, and a need for robust confirmatory studies.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Oncology

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