Article Text
Abstract
Aims: To describe the clinical and health economic impact of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) disease in children under 2 years of age.
Methods: Hospitalised children less than 2 years of age with a respiratory illness were studied over three consecutive RSV seasons (1996–99).
Results: The rates (per 1000 infants under 1 year of age) of hospitalisations from bronchiolitis and RSV illness were 30.8 and 24.4 respectively. The rates of death, intensive care admission, and need for ventilatory assistance during RSV related hospitalisation were 0.2%, 2.7%, and 1.5% respectively. From a cohort of 841 preterm infants, 6.3% had an RSV related hospitalisation during the study period, with the rate rising to 9.2% among those who were either born before 36 weeks gestation and were under 6 months of age at the onset of the RSV seasons, or were less than 2 years of age with chronic lung disease needing home oxygen therapy. Eight of 25 children on home oxygen therapy had RSV related rehospitalisation. Need for assisted ventilation during the neonatal period and discharge home on oxygen therapy were significantly associated with the risk of subsequent RSV related hospitalisation in preterm infants less than 6 months of age. The direct health authority cost of all RSV hospitalisations was £542 203, while the currently recommended immunoprophylaxis for the high risk infants would have cost £652 960.
Conclusions: Preterm infants receiving assisted ventilation and those on home oxygen therapy are particularly at risk of RSV related hospitalisation. Serious adverse outcomes are however uncommon even among these high risk infants.
- respiratory syncytial virus
- bronchiolitis
- prematurity
- epidemiology
- chronic lung disease
- CLD, chronic lung disease
- FCE, finished consultant episode
- LRTI, lower respiratory tract infection
- RSV, respiratory syncytial virus
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- CLD, chronic lung disease
- FCE, finished consultant episode
- LRTI, lower respiratory tract infection
- RSV, respiratory syncytial virus
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a major cause of lower respiratory tract disease in young children.1 For over four decades, attempts have been made to prevent RSV disease, both through active and passive immunisations. Recently, a humanised monoclonal antibody (palivizumab) showed a 55% reduction in RSV associated hospitalisation rates among “high risk” infants (preterm and those with chronic lung disease).2 The product is however expensive, and the cost effectiveness of administering it to the recommended groups of infants has been challenged.3,4
In order to identify the infants at the greatest benefit from such immunoprophylaxis, recent studies have focused on the incidence of RSV disease in the high risk population.5–7 Epidemiological studies of bronchiolitis and RSV disease across both “low” and “high” risk infants are, however, limited with the last UK data being over 25 years old.8,9 Reliable population based data on the clinical and health economic burden of RSV in both the “low” and “high” risk children are urgently needed to assess the cost effectiveness of newer preventive therapies in the context of the total burden of the disease.
The objectives of our study were: (1) to define the clinical (need for, and duration of hospitalisation, intensive care admission and mechanical ventilation, and mortality) and health economic (health authority costs) impact of RSV disease among children less than 2 years of age resident in a geographically defined population; (2) to define the contribution of RSV to respiratory hospitalisations in children under 2 years; and (3) to determine the incidence and predictors of, RSV related hospitalisations among the “high risk” infants.
METHODS
Denominator population
Shropshire is predominantly rural; 55.1% of its population (n = 433 650) resides in areas with less than 25 people per hectare. The county’s Child Health System database was interrogated to provide the population of all children under 2 years of age resident within Shropshire Health Authority (SHA) as on 1 November 1996, 1997, and 1998. This cohort excluded children who were born in SHA but had moved out of the county prior to the onset of RSV season, but included those born elsewhere who had moved into SHA before the RSV season.
High risk population
Preterm infants (<37 weeks gestation) under 1 year of age, and children under 2 years of age with chronic lung disease (CLD; oxygen dependency at 36 weeks post-menstrual age) discharged on home oxygen therapy or respiratory medications (bronchodilators, diuretics, and oral or inhaled steroids) in whom there was continuing involvement of the neonatal home oxygen service within six months of the start of the RSV season constituted the “high risk” group. We excluded children with congenital heart disease other than a patent arterial duct in preterm infants, as the immunoprophylaxis is currently not indicated for such children.10 We extracted details of the neonatal period, including gestational age and birth weight, need for and duration of assisted ventilation, need for supplemental oxygen at 4 weeks of postnatal and 36 weeks of postmenstrual age, date and details of medications at discharge from the neonatal unit, and need for home oxygen therapy from the neonatal records.
Children with RSV disease
The Shropshire-wide single microbiology database was interrogated to provide a cohort of children under 2 years of age with a positive RSV immunofluorescence test between 1 April 1996 and 31 March 1999. By linkage of this cohort to the SHA’s database, we excluded children not ordinarily resident within the SHA. We ascertained the RSV status and details of hospitalisation of Shropshire resident children admitted with bronchiolitis or other lower respiratory tract illnesses (LRTI) to hospitals outside the county by contacting the local paediatricians.
Hospitalisation
The health authority’s database provided details of hospitalisation of all Shropshire resident children less than 2 years of age, irrespective of the place of their hospitalisation.
A bronchiolitis associated hospitalisation was defined as any hospitalisation where International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision (ICD-10) codes11 for acute bronchiolitis (J21.0, 21.8, and 21.9) appeared anywhere in the discharge coding.
An RSV related hospitalisation was defined as a hospitalisation with positive RSV immunofluorescence test within seven days of admission. This strategy included all respiratory illnesses associated with RSV such as bronchiolitis, pneumonia, and croup.
Hospitalisation due to other LRTI was defined by ICD-10 codes J10–18 and J20–22 in the diagnostic coding. This strategy excluded hospitalisations due to asthma.
For these hospitalisations, we analysed the length of hospital stay, the need for intensive care unit (ICU) admission and ventilatory support, and deaths, from the aforementioned databases as well as clinical records. For calculation of rates of hospitalisation, we assigned infants born between 1 November of the given year and 31 October of the subsequent year to the season starting on 1 November of the latter year.
We used the SHA’s contract price for an emergency finished consultant episode (FCE) for the three study years to calculate the hospitalisation costs. For children admitted to the ICU, the price quoted by the relevant unit was used.
Mann-Whitney U test and the χ2 test with Fisher’s exact modification where necessary, were used for comparison of the continuous variables and the proportions, respectively. The associations between a number of predictor variables and the occurrence of hospitalisations were analysed by the χ2 test. Predictor variables that were significant at p<0.05 in the bivariate analyses were entered into a multiple logistic regression model to assess their influence on the risk of RSV related hospitalisation among the high risk infants.
RESULTS
Of 15 116 infants under 1 year of age resident in the county at the start of the three RSV seasons, 452 (3%) had moved in some time after birth. Details of gestation and birth weight were unavailable for 82.2% and 20% of this latter group. On the other hand, this information was available for 99.8% and 100% of Shropshire resident infants who were either born in the county or had transferred into it, at or soon after birth, and hence the gestation and birth weight specific rates of hospitalisation were calculated for these infants (n = 14 664). Of the 452 excluded infants, six were known to be preterm and 15 weighed under 2500 g at birth. There were 24 bronchiolitis associated and 11 RSV related hospitalisations among these infants.
Bronchiolitis associated hospitalisations
There were 653 bronchiolitis associated hospitalisations among 561 children <2 years (21.4 hospitalisations/1000 children). Bronchiolitis was the primary diagnosis in 94.9% of these hospitalisations. RSV status was known in 77%, and positive in 58.8% of these hospitalisations. The majority of admissions (93.8%) occurred between months of November and March each year. Forty three (6.6%) hospitalisations took place in hospitals outside the county. During the study period, bronchiolitis accounted for 7.7% of all-cause hospitalisations among children <2 years of age.
The median (interquartile range) age at hospitalisation was 20 (10–33) weeks, with infants less than 12 and 6 months of age accounting for 92.8% and 63.9% of hospitalisations, respectively (table 1). These hospitalisations resulted in 1616 in-patient days with a median (interquartile range) length of stay of 2 (1–3) days. Ninety eight (16.2%) admissions took place among preterm infants.
During the same period, there were 446 hospitalisations among 399 children under 2 years from other lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI). Pneumonia (41%) and unspecified LRTI (46%) were the most common primary diagnoses. Compared to bronchiolitis associated hospitalisations, this cohort was older and did not show any specific seasonal variation (table 2). Bronchiolitis associated hospitalisations accounted for 76% of the hospitalisations of infants under 6 months from all LRTI, rising to 86% during the months of November to April.
RSV related hospitalisation
During the study period, there were 497 RSV related hospitalisations (386 coded as bronchiolitis) in 411 children under 2 years (16.3 hospitalisations/1000 children). Eighty three per cent had one, 15% had two, and 2% had three hospitalisations. Boys predominated over girls in the ratio of 1.5:1. The vast majority (98.9%) of hospitalisations occurred between November and March each year. RSV infections accounted for 9.8% of all pneumonias in children less than 2 years of age, with the proportion increasing to 25% of infants under 1 year during the RSV season.
The median (interquartile range) age at hospitalisation was 20.5 (10.4–35.3) weeks, with 62% and 90% of the children being under 6 and 12 months of age, respectively. Forty five infants were under 6 weeks of age and 67 (16.7% of those with known gestation) were preterm. The subgroup specific rates of hospitalisations are shown in table 1. The median (range) length of RSV related hospitalisation was 2 (0–19) days. Hospital stays were significantly longer in infants less than 6 weeks of age at admission (median (interquartile range): 4 (2–5) v 2 (1–4) days; p = 0.008), and those with birth weight under 2500 g (median (interquartile range): 4 (2–5) v 2 (1–4) days; p = 0.032).
High risk infants
Of the study cohort of infants, 6.3% and 1.1% were born before 37 and 32 weeks of gestation, respectively. Complete neonatal data were available for 846 preterm infants. This cohort comprised 88.5%, 93%, and 100% of surviving infants born before 37, 36, and 28 weeks of gestation respectively, and resident in the county at the start of the RSV season. Five infants with congenital heart disease were excluded from further analysis. Of 209 infants of ⩽32 weeks gestation who had received active respiratory support, 33% developed CLD. The incidence of home oxygen therapy among the survivors of <32 weeks gestation with oxygen dependency at 28 days of age, and among the survivors of 501–1500 g birth weight was 29% and 10.6%, respectively. Of Shropshire’s live born infants between 1995 and 1998, 105 (5.2/1000) were reported to the regional congenital abnormalities register with structural congenital heart disease.
Preterm infants
Fifty three preterm infants for whom complete neonatal data were available (6.3%) had an RSV related hospitalisation during the study period, resulting in 249 in-patient days. The median (interquartile range) age at, and duration of, hospitalisation were 23.7 (11.6–38.3) weeks and 2 (1–4) days, respectively.
Of 436 preterm infants under 6 months, 6.9% had an RSV related hospitalisation during the relevant season. Table 3 shows the risk factors for RSV related hospitalisation among these infants. In the logistic regression model, ventilatory assistance during neonatal period (OR (95% CI) 2.8 (1.2 to 6.3)) and discharge home on oxygen (OR (95% CI) 5.5 (1.1 to 24.5)) were significantly associated with the risk of subsequent RSV related hospitalisation. Gestation and weight at birth, month of discharge from the neonatal unit, and occurrence of intracranial bleeds or retinopathy (data not shown) did not influence the risk of RSV related admission.
Of 304 infants who were either <36 weeks of gestation and <6 months of age at the start of the RSV season, or <2 years of age and were discharged on home oxygen therapy, 28 (9.2%) were rehospitalised for RSV disease. Of 136 babies born before 32 weeks gestation, 10.3% had an RSV related rehospitalisation before their second birthday. Ten of 110 infants born before 32 weeks of gestation who were either under 6 months at the start of the RSV seasons (n = 85) or under 2 years with the last involvement of neonatal home oxygen service within 6 months of the impending RSV season (n = 25), were rehospitalised for RSV during the relevant season. Six of 58 (10.3%) infants born <29 weeks of gestation had an RSV related hospitalisation during their first year; one further infant was admitted before the second birthday.
Preterm infants with CLD under 2 years of age
Ten of 64 (15.6%) preterm infants with CLD had an RSV related hospitalisation before their second birthday, accounting for a total of 50 in-patient days. The median (interquartile range) age at, and duration of hospital stay were 53 (33–84) weeks and 3.5 (2–9) days respectively. Eight of the 25 children under 2 years with CLD on home oxygen therapy had RSV related rehospitalisations.
Serious adverse outcomes of RSV related hospitalisation
One infant (0.2%) with complex congenital heart disease died from an RSV related illness during the study period. Eleven children (2.7%), six preterm, were admitted to the intensive care unit; six (1.5%) infants, three preterm, required ventilatory assistance for a total of 27 days.
The health economic costs
The maximum costs incurred by the health authority over the three year period for bronchiolitis associated and RSV related hospitalisations of all children under 2 years of age were £542 203 and £421 938 respectively, with preterm infants <36 weeks gestation under 6 months of age accounting for 13.7% and 11% of these costs respectively. RSV rehospitalisations (including ICU admissions) of children under 2 years of age with CLD contributed to 8.1% of total RSV related health authority costs. Table 4 shows the minimum costs of prophylaxis with palivizumab for various “at risk” groups of infants.
DISCUSSION
Our study provides the epidemiological features of RSV disease among all infants in a defined geographic population. The salient findings of our study are that: (1) the rates of RSV related hospitalisations in infancy have tripled in the past 25 years; (2) preterm infants requiring ventilatory assistance during the neonatal period, and those discharged on home oxygen therapy are at particular risk of RSV related hospitalisation; and (3) serious adverse outcomes are rare, even among the high risk infants.
Strengths and limitations
We took several measures to minimise potential biases. Our use of the health authority’s database ensured inclusion of all admissions of Shropshire resident children from bronchiolitis irrespective of their place of hospitalisation. Our strategy of defining the cohort of children with bronchiolitis by using the occurrence of the relevant diagnostic codes anywhere in the diagnostic coding ensured inclusion of children with complicated illness such as respiratory failure or nosocomially acquired illness. Inappropriate coding may have influenced the incidence of bronchiolitis. However, with its characteristic clinical picture and well defined seasonal incidence, clinical diagnosis of bronchiolitis is reliable. These codes were used in only 3.7% of hospitalisations outside the usual RSV season. Furthermore, a local audit of the accuracy of coding confirmed that 95% of cases of clinically diagnosed bronchiolitis were correctly coded. The incidence of RSV related hospitalisations might have been underestimated if there was a higher proportion of RSV positivity among the RSV unknown hospitalisations. The proportion of RSV known bronchiolitis in our cohort (77%) was, however, higher than has been reported from the UK in recent years.6,7 We excluded outborn infants who had transferred into the county due to non-availability of gestational age data. As the rates of hospitalisations in this group were similar to the study cohort, their exclusion is unlikely to be of significance.
Shropshire has lower population density and deprivation than the average for England. However, the rates of prematurity, congenital heart disease, CLD, and home oxygen therapy, the risk factors for severe RSV disease, in our cohort compare well with the published population based data from the UK and North America.12–16
Other studies
Bronchiolitis related hospitalisations
The rate of bronchiolitis related hospitalisation among infants under 1 year of age in our study (3.1%) is the same as that derived from US National Hospital Discharge Survey data (3.1%).17 No comparable UK data exist.
The rate of RSV related hospitalisation in infancy in our study (2.4%) was nearly three times that in a previous collaborative investigation of RSV infection across the UK in 1973–75.9 For a predominantly rural county, it is also higher than that previously reported from northeast England over 25 years ago.18 A similar increase in the rates of bronchiolitis associated hospitalisations has been seen in US children from 1980 to 1996.17 The rise was particularly marked for infants under 6 months, suggesting either increased acquisition of RSV or a lower threshold for admission in this group of infants. Other factors including improved survival of premature infants, increased population density, altered child care practices, and increasing use of pulse oximetry to detect hypoxia may underlie this substantial increase in RSV related hospitalisations.
High risk infants
Our data show that high risk infants contribute a small proportion of total clinical burden of bronchiolitis and RSV disease. Preterm infants and infants with CLD accounted for 16.6% and 1.9% of RSV related hospitalisations. In the US survey, 2% of bronchiolitis discharges were concurrently coded for chronic lung disease.17
The incidence of RSV related hospitalisations among the high risk infants in our study was higher than recently reported from the USA and UK. Five per cent of preterm infants under 1 year were rehospitalised for an RSV proven illness compared to 3.2% in the Kaiser Permanente study.5 However, the latter study had underrepresentation of lower socioeconomic groups, where the risk of RSV disease is high.19 Similarly, the proportion (5.6%) of low birth weight infants rehospitalised with RSV during their first year in our study was twice that (2.8%) in the follow up by Nachman et al in New York.20 The incidence of RSV related hospitalisation among the preterm infants (<36 weeks gestation) or those under 2 years of age with CLD in our study is broadly similar to the incidence (10.6%) in the placebo arm of the IMpact-RSV trial but more than double that in Liverpool.2,7 However, in the latter study, RSV was found in only 40% of infants with bronchiolitis compared to about 60% in our study. The incidence of RSV related hospitalisation among infants born before 32 weeks in our cohort (10.1%) again was twice that in London (4%).6
For a sparsely populated county with lower than average rates of deprivation, the rates of RSV disease would have been expected to be lower than in the industrial-urban areas of Liverpool and London. The proportion of high risk infants in our cohort does not appear to be higher than in others. The study periods of the above epidemiological investigations overlap. Changes in the virulence of the RSV strain therefore seem unlikely. We cannot exclude the possibility that the criteria for hospitalisation in our cohort may have been different to others. However, for 1998–99 season, the number of FCEs in children under 2 years from bronchiolitis in our cohort (20.1/1000) was similar to the figure for England (18.9/1000), suggesting that any systematic bias is most unlikely.21,22 We therefore believe that the rates of RSV related hospitalisations in our cohort reflect a near complete ascertainment of cases.
Serious adverse outcomes
Our study showed a very low occurrence of serious adverse events, even among high risk infants. The only death occurred in an infant with complex congenital heart disease—a group for whom immunoprophylaxis is currently not indicated. The rates of ICU admission and ventilation were substantially lower than those reported in the Canadian high risk infants (6.8% v 33.6% for ICU admission and 6.8% v 15.6% for ventilation, Shropshire v Canadian)23 and in the Kaiser Permanente cohort (8.9% v 18.4% for ICU admission),5 and similar to those found in the palivizumab recipients of the IMpact-RSV study.
Health economic burden of RSV and costs of prophylaxis
We did not attempt to evaluate the total costs of RSV disease in infancy. In a health care system of finite resources, most new interventions involve shifting of resources so that increased spending in one area is offset by resource saving elsewhere.24 Our analysis therefore focused on the direct costs of prophylaxis and hospitalisation from the perspective of a health care provider. Such an approach seems reasonable for an intervention that does not reduce the risk of serious adverse outcomes such as death or need for assisted ventilation. The cost of prophylaxis in our analysis is a conservative estimate since we assumed that all infants weighed less than 3.3 kg, thereby accessing the lowest drug price; furthermore, we did not account for the costs of visits for immunisation, the disposables, and staff costs. Even then our analyses show that direct drug costs to the health authority, following the recommendations of the IMpact-RSV trial or the American Academy of Paediatrics,25 would have exceeded the costs of the entire RSV related hospitalisation. Even following the more conservative recommendations of Joffe3 and Thomas6 would have saved only 1.6% of the RSV related budget of the health authority, assuming that the prophylaxis would have been successful in averting all the RSV related hospitalisations in these cohorts, but would have added 25% more costs simply for the drug. Our data confirm the previous suggestions that the RSV immunoprophylaxis strategies are currently too highly priced for the outcomes they avert.4 Although their cost effectiveness may be improved through better targeting and a major reduction in their costs, immunoprophylaxis strategies will have only a minor impact on the total clinical and health economic burden of RSV disease in infancy. Reduction of the vast majority of health economic burden of RSV disease in infancy must await development of a safe and effective vaccine.
Acknowledgments
We wish to thank Mr Brian Devine of the Microbiology Department at Royal Shrewsbury hospital, and Mrs Jenny Bennett and Mr Andrew Evans from Shropshire Community and Mental Health trust, as well as a number of consultant paediatricians for their assistance with the study. We are grateful to Dr Ed Hey for his critical review of this manuscript.