Respiratory enterovirus D68: virology, clinical surveillance, host-pathogen interactions, and therapeutic prospects
Yanshan Gui, Bing Han, Jialong Wei, Danlei Sun, Laixian Zhou, Shuchen Yuan, Wenzhan Xie, Hui Feng

TL;DR
This paper reviews the virology, immune interactions, and treatment prospects for enterovirus D68, which causes severe respiratory illnesses and acute flaccid myelitis in children.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive overview of EV-D68's clinical patterns, immune evasion strategies, and recent antiviral developments.
Findings
EV-D68 has shifted from causing mild infections to biennial outbreaks with severe respiratory illness and AFM.
Current clinical detection is challenging, and no FDA-approved treatments or vaccines exist.
Research is needed to understand immune responses and develop effective diagnostics and therapies.
Abstract
Enterovirus D68 (EV-D68), a unique enterovirus resembling human rhinoviruses, was long considered to cause only sporadic outbreaks of mild, self-limiting respiratory infections mainly in children. However, over the past decade, EV-D68 has exhibited a biennial outbreak pattern across multiple regions worldwide, coinciding with an increased incidence of severe respiratory illnesses and cases of acute flaccid myelitis (AFM) in children. The immune system plays a crucial role in providing rapid and effective defense. Nonetheless, our knowledge of the complex interactions between EV-D68 and the host immune responses is still very limited. Additionally, clinical detection of EV-D68 remains challenging, and there are no FDA-approved vaccines or antiviral treatments available. Therefore, ongoing research should focus on understanding the pathogenic mechanisms of EV-D68, as well as the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral Infections and Immunology Research · Respiratory viral infections research · Asthma and respiratory diseases
