Analysis of co-infection in severe and critical patients with influenza A (H1N1) pneumonia using metagenomic next-generation sequencing on bronchoalveolar lavage samples
Weitao Gong, Xiaolin Ma, Gaoming Wang, Yongzhong Guo, Zhiyuan Zhuo, Conghui Han, Yanmin Wu

TL;DR
This study found that co-infections are common in severe and critical influenza A (H1N1) pneumonia patients, with fungal and bacterial infections linked to higher mortality.
Contribution
The study identifies septic shock and fungal co-infections as independent risk factors for mortality in H1N1 pneumonia patients using mNGS.
Findings
Co-infections were present in 90.6% of patients with H1N1 pneumonia.
Septic shock and fungal co-infections were independently associated with 28-day mortality.
Bacterial co-infections were more common in critical patients compared to severe patients.
Abstract
The study aimed to clarify the co-infection patterns in adult patients with severe influenza A (H1N1) pneumonia using Metagenomic Next-Generation Sequencing (mNGS) and to examine their impact on clinical outcomes, particularly focusing on the differences between severe and critical patient groups. This retrospective analysis evaluated bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) from 53 adult patients diagnosed with severe influenza A (H1N1) pneumonia. Patients were categorized into severe and critical groups depending on the need for invasive ventilation. mNGS was utilized to detect and analyze co-infections, which included fungal, bacterial and viral pathogens. Statistical analysis was conducted to assess the prevalence of these co-infections and their association with clinical outcomes, such as 28-day mortality. In the cohort, 48 patients (90.6%) experienced co-infections. In the severe…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPneumonia and Respiratory Infections · Antifungal resistance and susceptibility · Gut microbiota and health
