Children with chronic conditions at risk for severe RSV outcomes — Study
Published on Apr 25, 2025
By IANS
- NEW DELHI — Young children with chronic conditions are more likely to be
hospitalised for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) than healthy children,
according to a new study on Friday.
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- The study led by researchers from the University of
British Columbia in Canada showed that toddlers with chronic conditions are
hospitalised for RSV at twice the rate of healthy toddlers.
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- The risk was highest for children born very prematurely
under 28 weeks of gestation, or with conditions affecting multiple organs, the
lungs, heart, or digestive system.
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- Researchers recommend that children with those specific
conditions receive immunisation against RSV in their first season to increase
protection, even if their mother was vaccinated.
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- Current guidelines suggest pregnant women should receive
vaccination before birth to pass on antibodies.
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- “Our research finds that many children with chronic
conditions require seasonal RSV immunisation beyond the period of protection
that can be achieved with maternal vaccination. It expands current definitions
from traditionally defined high-risk groups to other children with chronic
conditions that could equally benefit from RSV immunisation, up to two years of
age,” said Marina Vineta Paramo, a graduate student at the Faculty of Medicine.
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- “Our study underscores the importance of children with
chronic conditions getting immunised against RSV in their second season, and in
their first season even if their mother was vaccinated,” Paramo added.
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- The study analysed data from 431,937 infants born in
British Columbia, Canada, between 2013 and 2023, including 25,452 infants with
chronic health conditions.
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- About 4,567 children experienced 4,593 hospitalisations
over their first and second seasons.
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- Children with chronic medical conditions had
significantly longer hospital and paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) stays
and required more mechanical ventilation.
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- In the second RSV season, children with chronic medical
conditions had higher RSV hospitalisation rates than those in the first season,
especially when their conditions affected the respiratory, cardiovascular, or
gastrointestinal systems, involved congenital anomalies, or affected multiple
body systems, including Down syndrome.
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- The research will be presented at the Paediatric Academic
Societies (PAS) 2025 meeting, held April 24-28 in Honolulu, Hawaii.