Retrospective analysis of hospital electronic health records reveals unseen cases of acute hepatitis with unknown aetiology in adults in Oxfordshire
Cedric C. S. Tan, Gavin Kelly, Jack Cregan, Joseph D. Wilson, Tim James, Meera Chand, Susan Hopkins, Maaike Swets, J. Kenneth Baillie, Katie Jeffery, Ann Sarah Walker, David W. Eyre, Nicole Stoesser, Philippa C. Matthews

TL;DR
A study using hospital records found a rise in unexplained acute hepatitis in adults during a child outbreak period, but no direct link to adenovirus.
Contribution
The study reveals an increase in adult cases of acute hepatitis with unknown causes during a known child outbreak period, using electronic health records for surveillance.
Findings
AHUA cases in adults increased significantly during the outbreak period.
More adenovirus tests were performed during the outbreak, but no link to increased hepatitis severity was found.
EHR data can detect population-level health trends and support outbreak surveillance.
Abstract
An outbreak of acute severe hepatitis of unknown aetiology (AS-Hep-UA) in children during 2022 was subsequently linked to infections with adenovirus-associated virus 2 and other ‘helper viruses’, including human adenovirus. It is possible that evidence of such an outbreak could be identified at a population level based on routine data captured by electronic health records (EHR). We used anonymised EHR to collate retrospective data for all emergency presentations to Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in the UK, between 2016–2022, for all ages from 18 months and older. We investigated clinical characteristics and temporal distribution of presentations of acute hepatitis and of adenovirus infections based on laboratory data and clinical coding. We relaxed the stringent case definition adopted during the AS-Hep-UA to identify all cases of acute hepatitis with unknown…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · COVID-19 and healthcare impacts · Respiratory viral infections research
