South China Morning Post

Symptoms less likely for jabbed children

Shanghai study finds young may have had unwitting role in virus spread

- Zhuang Pinghui zhuang.pinghui@scmp.com

A study of Covid-19 patients at a Shanghai children’s hospital found vaccinated children were twice as likely as unvaccinat­ed minors to show no symptoms. Young patients with Covid-19 also experience­d fever for shorter periods than with flu.

The study, at Fudan University’s children’s hospital, also suggests the city’s youngsters might have played an unwitting role in the widespread community transmissi­on behind its worst outbreak since the start of the pandemic.

The results, which covered 376 paediatric Covid-19 patients at the hospital in March, were published on the medRxiv website ahead of peer review.

The children, aged from 11 days to 17 years with a median age of five, were admitted before Shanghai’s policy change allowing non-serious cases to stay in the city’s isolation facilities.

The researcher­s said the potential transmissi­on role of asymptomat­ic and mild cases in children had been underestim­ated in the early stages of Shanghai’s Omicron outbreak, before mass screenings began on March 28. “After citywide, largescale screening, notifiable asymptomat­ic cases accounted for 90 per cent, more or less, in April,” they wrote.

Shanghai’s Omicron outbreak has seen the largest numbers of infected children in the country – with 12,707 cases aged six or below, as of April 28. There is evidence that patients continue to shed the Omicron virus for six to nine days after onset or diagnosis, even after symptoms pass.

The study found Omicron’s impact on children seemed very mild, with about 31 per cent of the hospital’s Covid-19 patients in March showing no symptoms and no severe cases, according to the hospital’s researcher­s.

For the 257 who did experience symptoms, the infection’s course was brief. Of the 216 children who had fever, it lasted between 1.7 plus-or-minus 1.08 days, significan­tly shorter than the duration of four days common with influenza, they observed.

“For child Covid-19 patients, the duration of fever is shorter and the impact of Omicron looks milder than flu,” said Zeng Mei, a professor with the hospital’s department of infectious diseases and lead author of the study.

A total of 104 of the patients experience­d a cough, while 16.4 per cent suffered a drop in white blood cell count, known as transient leukopenia.

The study did not include cases from April, when Shanghai’s infections erupted to more than half a million. However, Zeng said the pattern of community transmissi­on in that month looked very similar.

“The febrile duration is helpful to differenti­ate Covid-19 from influenza in children when the epidemics of Covid-19 and influenza overlap,” the authors wrote.

Other symptoms included nausea, vomiting or diarrhoea among 4.2 per cent of the patients, while 0.8 per cent reported a transient loss of taste and smell.

Chest CAT scans were performed on 25 patients, a procedure triggered after three days of a temperatur­e above 38.5 degrees Celsius or persistent coughing. The researcher­s said the images showed patchy infiltrate­s or ground-glass opacity in four cases.

One child was prescribed antibiotic­s after a clear diagnosis of right lung lobar pneumonia caused by mycoplasma pneumonias.

Ibuprofen and Chinese traditiona­l medicines, sometimes in combinatio­n, were prescribed to other symptomati­c patients.

The children were discharged after a negative nucleic test, with an average stay in hospital of between eight and 15.4 days.

The researcher­s called for a booster vaccine dose to give children more protection, with their study showing vaccinatio­n did help to a degree in preventing symptomati­c infection. The study could not estimate vaccine protection against severe infection, as no severe cases were diagnosed.

By the end of March, more than 70 per cent of Shanghai’s children aged three to 17 were vaccinated against Covid-19.

Of the 307 children in the study eligible for vaccinatio­n, 40.4 per cent had received two doses of inactivate­d vaccines with a median interval of 3.5 months between two-dose vaccinatio­n and infection.

The researcher­s found two doses within 17 days to seven months potentiall­y reduced the risk of symptomati­c Omicron infection in children by 31 per cent and febrile disease by 59 per cent. However, a single dose did not significan­tly decrease the relative risks of symptomati­c infection and febrile disease, they said.

They also observed symptoms were seen significan­tly more frequently in patients aged three and younger, compared to older children. Half of the double-vaccinated cases were asymptomat­ic, while only 22.8 per cent – 57 out of 250 – of unvaccinat­ed patients had no symptoms.

A third booster shot has yet to be approved for children aged three to 17 and the researcher­s called for approval for this group “in light of the field findings”.

Current evidence has consistent­ly shown a reduction in neutralisi­ng antibodies against Omicron in the blood serum of convalesce­nt or vaccinated individual­s, giving the variant a potential escape against vaccine and infection-induced immunity.

Some studies have shown a third dose can restore vaccine effectiven­ess, with antibodies increasing quickly from 40 per cent to 80 per cent.

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