P-532. The burden of HMPV-associated hospitalization among children aged <18 years, 2016-2024
Leah Goldstein, Anna Wang-Erickson, Ayzsa Tannis, Peter G Szilagyi, Geoffrey A Weinberg, Mary A Staat, Janet A Englund, Eileen J Klein, Julie A Boom, Jennifer E Schuster, Natasha B Halasa, Leila C Sahni, Laura S Stewart, Rangaraj Selvarangan, Marian G Michaels, Daniel C Payne

TL;DR
This study estimates the hospitalization rates of children under 18 with HMPV before and after the emergence of COVID-19, showing increased rates in most age groups.
Contribution
The study provides updated estimates of HMPV-associated hospitalizations using clinical and surveillance data before and after the pandemic.
Findings
HMPV hospitalization rates increased significantly in most age groups after the emergence of COVID-19.
Hospitalization rates were highest among children aged 3-5 months and 6-11 months in both periods.
Only 41% of HMPV-positive children were clinically tested before the pandemic, rising to 60% afterward.
Abstract
Human metapneumovirus (HMPV) is a major cause of respiratory disease. Clinical testing underestimates burden as HMPV is not included on most point-of-care tests. We estimated HMPV-associated pediatric hospitalization rates before and after the emergence of COVID-19 using clinical test results and prospectively collected surveillance specimens.Figure 1.Proportion of hospitalized children with an HMPV-positive surveillance test who were also clinically tested, before and after the emergence of COVID-19Figure 2.Estimated mean annual rate of HMPV-associated hospitalization and rate ratio comparing time periods, by age group* Indicates rate ratio differs at p-value <0.05 based on t test Proportion of hospitalized children with an HMPV-positive surveillance test who were also clinically tested, before and after the emergence of COVID-19 Estimated mean annual rate of HMPV-associated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory viral infections research · Pneumonia and Respiratory Infections · Respiratory and Cough-Related Research
