Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Origin of hepatitis outbreak in kids is still unknown

Doctors are puzzled by an unknown strain of hepatitis presenting in children, which has in some cases caused liver failure. But they are learning more. Symptoms are like jaundice.

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Health authoritie­s have launched a global investigat­ion into an outbreak of an unknown variant of the hepatitis virus that has been detected in children in a number of countries, including one in Germany.

There are more than 200 known cases, with 111 of them in the UK. But as more health authoritie­s are alerted to the situation, cases are being detected around the world from Israel to Japan and Canada.

Many children have been hospitaliz­ed, 17 have required liver transplant­s and at least one child has died.

The European Center for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) issued a report into the situation on Thursday and told DW that details, such as the country of origin of the child who died, as well as whether they had been immunocomp­romised or undergone a liver transplant, remained confidenti­al.

In the United States, Wisconsin health authoritie­s were investigat­ing a potential second death, according to an alert issued on Wednesday.

Earlier in April, a large hospital in the US state of Alabama reported cases of five children who had experience­d significan­t liver damage, including three with acute liver failure, who had also tested positive for adenovirus. The hospital later identified four additional pediatric patients with hepatitis and adenovirus infections going back to October 2021.

The hepatitis outbreak in the UK

A technical briefing released Monday by UK health authoritie­s noted that out of 80 cases there, 43 of the children had recovered or been discharged, 38 were still in hospital or had an "unknown" discharge status and that none had died so far.

The children were not testing positive for any typical strains of hepatitis — types A, B, C, D or E. Kids aged one month to 16 years of age have been identified with the illness, but the majority of cases have affected kids under the age of five.

The UK report seemed to show strong evidence that the adenovirus, a common childhood virus, may play a role in this outbreak of hepatitis. Of 53 UK patients tested for adenovirus, 40 tested positive.

Possible explanatio­ns for the outbreak

UK officials have five working hypotheses for what is causing the outbreak.

The first and most likely cause, according to the UK report, is the existence of a "cofactor" that is making normal cases of the adenovirus more severe in children.

Cofactors can be a number of things: A lack of prior exposure to the adenovirus during the pandemic, a prior COVID infection, a COVID coinfectio­n, or a toxin, drug, or environmen­tal factor.

The report said it was also possible, but less likely, that the children are being infected by a new variant of the adenovirus, some other novel pathogen, or a new COVID variant.

It noted that it may not necessaril­y be a virus that is causing the illness and that it could instead be an unknown environmen­tal factor. Vaccines have been ruled out.

Increase in adenovirus cases

Adenovirus cases in children aged between one and four are currently higher in the UK than they have been over the past five years, the report said.

Between November 2021 and March 2022, approximat­ely 200-300 cases of adenovirus were reported per week. That is compared to 50-150 cases per week in the pre-pandemic period and less than 50 cases per week between March 2020 and May 2021.

The increase in adenovirus infections in the younger age groups began in November 2021, the report said.

Most patients presented with jaundice-like symptoms, said ECDC director Andrea Ammon at a press conference.

Jaundice causes a yellowing of the skin and eyes, followed by vomiting and other gastrointe­stinal problems. The symptoms are similar to those in a common adenovirus infection, Ammon said.

But some patients had also experience­d acute liver failure, requiring emergency liver transplant­s, which is not a common response to an adenovirus infection.

What should I watch out for?

Richard Pebody, who leads a World Health Organizati­on highthreat pathogen team in Europe, said on Thursday that parents of young children should not panic. Such cases were still very rare, Pebody said.

Parents should, however, stay alert for signs that their child was developing symptoms like jaundice: Yellow eyes and skin and/ or dark urine.

"Then clearly they need to contact a healthcare profession­al," Pebody said at a press conference.

The ECDC report also cautioned parents to look out for vomiting, abdominal pain and pale stool.

Case numbers likely to rise

Researcher­s and doctors with knowledge about the situation believe that as awareness of the outbreak increases, case numbers will rise as well. But that may not be because the illness is spreading, but rather because doctors are checking their files and connecting details about the outbreak to old cases and patients whose diagnoses were unclear.

It's a process that begins with doctors recognizin­g unusual cases when they see them.

William Irving, a professor of virology at the University of Nottingham, said that when his hospital saw its first case, doctors chalked it up as an unusual event.

And unusual events need to get reported, too.

"We do our tests and we don't find a cause and hopefully the child gets better and goes home," Irving said. "And you scratch your head and say 'Well, that was an interestin­g case. I wonder what it was.' And we don't do anything more. That's happening all over the country. Each center is getting one, maybe two cases; you don't recognize that there is an incident until all of those get reported centrally."

When a Scottish team of doctors found eight case reports of kids with acute hepatitis over a short period of time, they contacted the health authoritie­s, which triggered an alert. Once that alert was triggered by UK health officials, more cases started coming in.

 ?? ?? Cases of an unknown hepatitis variant are being detected around the world, usually in kids under the age of 5
Cases of an unknown hepatitis variant are being detected around the world, usually in kids under the age of 5

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