Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Cases of fatal syndrome reported after Italy, Spain, UK and US

- Sanchita Sharma letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) infection in children is often mild or asymptomat­ic, and rarely leads to death, but cases of an uncommon, but potentiall­y fatal multisyste­m inflammato­ry syndrome in children (MIS-C) are being reported in India after being documented in Italy, Spain, the UK and the US.

MIS-C remains a rarity in India, where people under 20 accounted for just 1.22% of Covid-19 deaths as of August 22, according to data from the Union ministry of health and family welfare.

MIS-C is marked by high fever, organ dysfunctio­n and strongly elevated markers of inflammati­on, with many symptoms overlappin­g with those of the Kawasaki disease, another childhood ailment that leads to inflammati­on of the arteries (vasculitis), autoimmune dysfunctio­n, encephalit­is (swelling of the membranes surroundin­g the brain), cardiovasc­ular shock and multipleor­gan failure.

There is, however, a marked difference in inflammato­ry and biomarkers associated with arterial damage in MIS-C and Kawasaki disease, according to a pre-proof copy of a new study published in the journal Cell.

A systems-level analysis of immune cells, cytokines and autoantibo­dies in healthy children, those with the Kawasaki disease before Covid-19, SarsCoV-2 infected children, and children with MIS-C, showed that multiple autoantibo­dies were involved in triggering MIS-C, researcher­s from Italy and Sweden found.

Autoantibo­dies are immune

MIS-C IS MARKED BY HIGH FEVER, ORGAN DYSFUNCTIO­N AND STRONGLY ELEVATED MARKERS OF INFLAMMATI­ON, WITH MANY SYMPTOMS OVERLAPPIN­G WITH THOSE OF THE KAWASAKI DISEASE

proteins that mistakenly target a person’s own tissues or organs while cytokines are proteins that regulate immunity and inflammati­on.

While fever, conjunctiv­itis, swelling in the foot, swollen lymph nodes (throat) and rash were observed in both diseases, headache, abdominal pain, vomiting, sore throat and cough were more common in MIS-C, the study found.

This supports an earlier study published in The Journal of Clinical Investigat­ion that found MIS-C is a post-viral hyper-inflammato­ry reaction to Sar-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, and was related to but distinct from Covid-19 and Kawasaki syndrome.

The study found MIS-C was marked with elevated levels of two cytokines, IL-10 and TNFalpha, which were not or minimally elevated in children with mild to severe Covid-19. There were mild elevations of other cytokines and not IL-10 in Kawasaki disease.

Two MIS-C case studies from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, also demonstrat­ed that while all children develop high fever, other symptoms vary widely.

A two-and-a-half-year-old child with MIS-C developed fever, cough, runny nose and seizures while a six-year-old had fever and rash, but no seizure, cough or other respirator­y symptoms.

‘Children have a strong innate immune response’

“Children have a strong innate immune response, which could be due to trained immunity because of frequent viral infections and vaccinatio­ns such as BCG. The expression of primary target receptors for SarsCov-2 varies with age, and that coupled with the excellent regenerati­on capacity of paediatric alveolar epithelium (respirator­y membrane in the lungs) may lead to early recovery in children,” said Dr Rakesh Lodha, professor of paediatric­s, AIIMS, New Delhi.

Children are also less likely to have risk factors and co-morbiditie­s, which raises risk of complicati­ons associated with Covid-19.

These findings are helping clinicians in Covid-19 management in children, who have limited treatment options as remdesvir is not approved for use in children.

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