Reassessing the Performance of the "Step-By-Step" Approach to Febrile Infants 90 Days of Age and Younger in the Context of the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Multicentric Retrospective Study.
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State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: Not specified
Serval ID
serval:BIB_8C7C5863347C
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Reassessing the Performance of the "Step-By-Step" Approach to Febrile Infants 90 Days of Age and Younger in the Context of the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Multicentric Retrospective Study.
Journal
The Pediatric infectious disease journal
ISSN
1532-0987 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0891-3668
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/09/2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
41
Number
9
Pages
e365-e368
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Multicenter Study
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Infants with COVID-19 can often present with fever without source, which is a challenging situation in infants <90 days old. The "step-by-step" algorithm has been proposed to identify children at high risk of bacterial infection. In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, we aimed to reassess the diagnostic performance of this algorithm.
We performed a multicentric retrospective study in 3 French pediatric emergency departments between 2018 and 2020. We applied the "step-by-step" algorithm to 4 clinical entities: COVID-19, febrile urinary tract infections (FUTI), invasive bacterial infection (IBI), and enterovirus infections. The main outcome was the proportion of infants classified at high risk (ill-appearing, ≤21 days old, with leukocyturia or procalcitonin level ≥0.5 ng/mL).
Among the 199 infants included, 40 had isolated COVID-19, 25 had IBI, 60 had FUTI, and 74 had enterovirus infection. All but 1 infant with bacterial infection were classified at high risk (96% for IBI and 100% for FUTI) as well as 95% with enterovirus and 82% with COVID-19. Infants with COVID-19 were classified at high risk because an ill-appearance (72%), an age ≤21 days (27%), or leukocyturia (19%). All these infants had procalcitonin values <0.5 ng/mL and only 1 had C-reactive protein level >20 mg/L.
The "step-by-step" algorithm remains effective to identify infants with bacterial infection but misclassifies most infants with COVID-19 as at high risk of bacterial infection leading to unnecessary cares. An updated algorithm based adding viral testing may be needed to discriminate fever related to isolated COVID-19 in infants <90 days old.
We performed a multicentric retrospective study in 3 French pediatric emergency departments between 2018 and 2020. We applied the "step-by-step" algorithm to 4 clinical entities: COVID-19, febrile urinary tract infections (FUTI), invasive bacterial infection (IBI), and enterovirus infections. The main outcome was the proportion of infants classified at high risk (ill-appearing, ≤21 days old, with leukocyturia or procalcitonin level ≥0.5 ng/mL).
Among the 199 infants included, 40 had isolated COVID-19, 25 had IBI, 60 had FUTI, and 74 had enterovirus infection. All but 1 infant with bacterial infection were classified at high risk (96% for IBI and 100% for FUTI) as well as 95% with enterovirus and 82% with COVID-19. Infants with COVID-19 were classified at high risk because an ill-appearance (72%), an age ≤21 days (27%), or leukocyturia (19%). All these infants had procalcitonin values <0.5 ng/mL and only 1 had C-reactive protein level >20 mg/L.
The "step-by-step" algorithm remains effective to identify infants with bacterial infection but misclassifies most infants with COVID-19 as at high risk of bacterial infection leading to unnecessary cares. An updated algorithm based adding viral testing may be needed to discriminate fever related to isolated COVID-19 in infants <90 days old.
Keywords
Bacterial Infections/epidemiology, COVID-19/epidemiology, Child, Fever/microbiology, Humans, Infant, Pandemics, Procalcitonin, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Urinary Tract Infections/microbiology
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
27/01/2025 15:07
Last modification date
28/01/2025 8:07