Timing and genotype distribution of symptomatic and asymptomatic sapovirus infections and re-infections in a Nicaraguan birth cohort

To characterize the timing and genotype distribution of symptomatic and asymptomatic sapovirus infections and re-infections in a Nicaraguan birth cohort. Infants (N = 444) were enrolled at 10–14 days of life and observed weekly until 2 years of age. Stool samples were collected for each acute gastro...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical microbiology and infection 2023-04, Vol.29 (4), p.540.e9-540.e15
Hauptverfasser: González, Fredman, Diez-Valcarce, Marta, Reyes, Yaoska, Vielot, Nadja A., Toval-Ruíz, Christian, Gutiérrez, Lester, Zepeda, Omar, Cuadra, Edwing Centeno, Blandón, Patricia, Browne, Hannah, Bowman, Natalie M., Vílchez, Samuel, Vinjé, Jan, Becker-Dreps, Sylvia, Bucardo, Filemón
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To characterize the timing and genotype distribution of symptomatic and asymptomatic sapovirus infections and re-infections in a Nicaraguan birth cohort. Infants (N = 444) were enrolled at 10–14 days of life and observed weekly until 2 years of age. Stool samples were collected for each acute gastroenteritis (AGE) episode, and routine stool samples were collected monthly. Stool samples were tested for sapovirus using RT-qPCR, and positive samples were genotyped. A total of 348 children completed 2 years of AGE weekly surveillance; 93 (26.7%) of them experienced sapovirus AGE. Most infections occurred after 5 months of age and mainly during the second year of life (62.4%, 58/93) and early in the rainy season. Sapovirus screening in all stools from a subset of 67 children who consistently provided samples showed sapovirus infections in 91 of 330 (27.6%) AGE episodes and in 39 of 1350 (2.9%) routine stools. In this subset, the median age at the first sapovirus AGE was 11.2 months (95% CI, 9.3–15.9 months); 38 of 67 (57%) children experienced re-infections, 19 symptomatic and 19 asymptomatic. On average, sapovirus re-infections were reported 7.2 months after symptomatic and 5.3 months after asymptomatic infections. Genogroup GI (64%, 69/108) was the most common detected. Sapovirus GI.1 was more frequently detected in AGE stool samples than in routine stool samples (47.2%, 43/91 vs. 25.6%, 10/39; p 0.005), and re-infection with the same genotype was uncommon. The first sapovirus infections occurred at approximately 11 months of age, whereas the median time to symptomatic re-infection was 7.2 months. Re-infections with the same sapovirus genotype were rare during 2 years of life suggesting genotype-specific protection after natural infection.
ISSN:1198-743X
1469-0691
DOI:10.1016/j.cmi.2022.11.013