P-2192. The Burden of Respiratory Syncytial Virus Among Young Children in the United States is Not Well-Documented Across Settings: A Systematic Literature Review
Mina Suh, Naimisha Movva, Ruvim Izikson, William V La Via, Susan T Pastula, Marina Amaral de Avila Machado, Thomas Shin, Christopher Rizzo

TL;DR
This study reviews the impact of RSV in young US children, finding limited and inconsistent data on its burden across different healthcare settings.
Contribution
The novel contribution is a systematic review highlighting gaps in RSV data and testing practices among children aged 8 months to 5 years.
Findings
Outpatient RSV/LRTI rates ranged from 1.5 to 277.8 per 1000 children.
No data on RSV burden in urgent care settings were found.
Hospitalization rates and testing practices showed significant variability and underestimation in outpatient settings.
Abstract
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) and hospitalizations in United States (US) infants and young children. Following ACIP’s recommendation for nirsevimab in infants up to 8 months, we conducted a systematic literature review (SLR) to describe RSV and LRTI epidemiology in US children aged ≥8 months to < 5 years across healthcare settings.Figure 1PRISMA Flow Diagram PRISMA Flow Diagram This SLR followed PRISMA guidelines and was pre-registered on PROSPERO (#CRD42024599190). Literature published from 2009-2024 were evaluated for outcomes including RSV and LRTI rates in outpatient, urgent care, or emergency department (ED); RSV and LRTI hospitalization rates; and RSV laboratory testing practice and patterns. This review identified 2085 records; based on the eligibility criteria, 101 studies were included (Figure 1). Of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory viral infections research · Respiratory and Cough-Related Research · Pneumonia and Respiratory Infections
