Molecular Lineage Replacement and Shifted Seasonality of Pediatric Respiratory Syncytial Virus on Tropical Hainan Island, China, 2021–2024
Yibo Jia, Siqi Chen, Shannan Wu, Ruoyan Peng, Yi Huang, Gaoyu Wang, Meng Chang, Meifang Xiao, Yueqing Chen, Yujuan Guo, Feifei Yin

TL;DR
This study tracks how RSV resurged in China's tropical Hainan Island after pandemic restrictions eased, showing changes in seasonality and virus strains.
Contribution
The study reveals molecular lineage replacement and shifted seasonality of RSV in a tropical region post-pandemic NPI relaxation.
Findings
RSV positivity rebounded sharply in 2023–2024 after being suppressed in 2022 due to NPIs.
Seasonality shifted from summer–autumn to spring–summer, with RSV-A dominating in 2021–2023 and RSV-B in 2024.
Lineage-specific amino-acid and glycosylation changes were observed in RSV-A and RSV-B strains.
Abstract
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) resurged in many regions after the relaxation of stringent non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic. Here, we characterized the epidemiological patterns and molecular evolution of RSV among pediatric inpatients with acute respiratory tract infections (ARTIs) on tropical Hainan Island, China. We retrospectively analyzed 32,329 children (≤18 years) hospitalized at Hainan Women and Children’s Medical Center from January 2021 to December 2024. RSV positivity was determined using targeted next-generation sequencing. In total, 4483/32,329 (13.86%) patients were RSV-positive, with a high positivity in 2021 (20.27%, 957/4721), marked suppression in 2022 (2.03%, 106/5227) during intensive NPIs, and a rebound in 2023–2024 (15.31%, 1490/9732; 15.26%, 1930/12,649). RSV positivity was higher in boys than girls (14.42% vs.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory viral infections research · COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · Virus-based gene therapy research
