Intensive active surveillance for human rhinovirus in 78 household members over 6 months yielded an 8.9% positivity rate, revealing continuous invasion and frequent heterotypic repeat infections.
Observational (n=78)
78 participants across 5 households followed for 6 months with nasopharyngeal collections every 3-4 days to delineate the natural history of human rhinovirus.
Human rhinovirus (HRV) exposure
HRV positive nasopharyngeal collections
We report on infection patterns in 5 households (78 participants) delineating the natural history of human rhinovirus (HRV). Nasopharyngeal collections were obtained every 3-4 days irrespective of symptoms, over a 6-month period, with molecular screening for HRV and typing by sequencing VP4/VP2 junction. Overall, 311/3468 (8.9%) collections were HRV positive: 256 were classified into 3 species: 104 (40.6%) HRV-A; 14 (5.5%) HRV-B, and 138 (53.9%) HRV-C. Twenty-six known HRV types (13 HRV-A, 3 HRV-B, and 10 HRV-C) were identified (A75, C1, and C35 being most frequent). We observed continuous invasion and temporal clustering of HRV types in households (range 5-13 over 6 months). Intrahousehold transmission was independent of clinical status but influenced by age. Most (89.0%) of HRV infection episodes were limited to <14 days. Individual repeat infections were frequent (range 1-7 over 6 months), decreasing with age, and almost invariably heterotypic, indicative of lasting type-specific immunity and low cross-type protection.
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Everlyn Kamau
University of California, San Francisco
Clayton Onyango
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Grieven P. Otieno
Kenya Medical Research Institute
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
University of Warwick
Public Health England
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Kamau et al. (Wed,) conducted a observational in Human rhinovirus (HRV) infection (n=78). Human rhinovirus (HRV) exposure was evaluated on HRV positive nasopharyngeal collections. Intensive active surveillance for human rhinovirus in 78 household members over 6 months yielded an 8.9% positivity rate, revealing continuous invasion and frequent heterotypic repeat infections.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a2017f54f3426e554a1a675 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiy621
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