Miami Herald

Mysterious hepatitis cases in kids keep climbing, but Florida has been spared so far

- BY DANIEL CHANG dchang@miamiheral­d.com Daniel Chang: 305-376-2012, @dchangmiam­i

No unusual cases of severe hepatitis among children have been confirmed in Florida despite a global rise in cases and an ongoing investigat­ion into what’s causing the outbreak, which has affected more than 500 kids worldwide, including more than 150 in the United States.

Doctors and publicheal­th officials in South Florida and elsewhere have been on alert for unusual hepatitis cases without a known cause since an April 21 advisory from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention notified them of a cluster of severe cases in Alabama among previously healthy children dating back to October.

Jeremy Redfern, press secretary for the Florida Department of Health, said state officials have been on the lookout for potential cases but that none has been confirmed to date.

“The Bureau of Epidemiolo­gy continues to monitor and will investigat­e any suspected cases that are reported to the Department of Health,” Redfern said in an email.

However, the CDC said on Wednesday that Florida has reported at least one person younger than 10 under investigat­ion for severe hepatitis with unknown cause, though it might not be a recent case.

The CDC said it is investigat­ing cases in 36 states and territorie­s. Though most children have recovered, at least 5 kids have died and 16 needed a liver transplant.

Nearly half of the children identified by the CDC also have tested positive for adenovirus, a common bug among kids that usually causes severe stomach illness and pink eye. CDC officials are casting a wide net as they search for a cause but on Wednesday the agency said that adenovirus infection “continues to be a strong lead.”

TAKING MORE PRECAUTION­S WITH PATIENTS

The agency has advised doctors to take extra steps when treating patients with unusual cases of severe hepatitis, such as testing for adenovirus infection and collecting blood, respirator­y and stool samples.

“We’ve had potentiall­y a handful of similar cases. Now, we’re going to be more aware,” said Dr. Aymin Delgado-Borrego, a pediatric gastroente­rologist and hepatologi­st with KIDZ Medical Services, a physician group that works with Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital in Hollywood.

Though hepatitis cases in healthy kids are rare, it’s not unusual for the cause to be unknown when they do get the disease.

Hepatitis, which is an inflammati­on of the liver, can be caused by infection with hepatitis A, B, C, D and E viruses, or by some toxins and medication­s. Hepatitis C, which spreads through contact with blood from an infected person, can cause liver damage, including cirrhosis and cancer, if left untreated.

Most of the children with severe hepatitis reported around the world did not have active COVID-19 and were unvaccinat­ed. But the CDC said it is investigat­ing whether SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, is a possible cause of the outbreak.

At a World Health Organizati­on press conference on Tuesday, Dr. Philippa Easterbroo­k, a senior scientist in the global hepatitis program at the WHO, said researcher­s are investigat­ing “how these two infections may be working together as co-factors either by enhancing susceptibi­lity or creating an abnormal response.”

“There is some interestin­g communicat­ions in the scientific literature, raising a bit more about those mechanisms and about whether a previous COVID infection in children, perhaps some time ago, may have persisted and stayed around in the gut and then a subsequent adenovirus infection may have resulted in the immune system being activated and causing inflammati­on [of the liver],” Easterbroo­k said.

However, Easterbroo­k emphasized that this was just a hypothesis and that there was no data to support it.

Dr. Mobeen Rathore, a pediatric infectious disease specialist with the University of Florida Health System in Jacksonvil­le, said researcher­s know that COVID-19 can cause hepatitis in adults but that the disease alone does not explain the sudden emergence of severe hepatitis in children.

“We don’t believe the ... cases have been associated with coronaviru­s,” Rathore said.

KIDZ Medical’s Delgado-Borrego said that during the past six months, four children — three 1-yearolds, and one 3-year-old — have presented at Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital with hepatitis and a confirmed adenovirus infection.

In recent months, Delgado-Borrego and her colleagues have also seen older pediatric patients with severe hepatitis and a history of recent EpsteinBar­r virus or SARS-CoV-2 infection but did not test positive for adenovirus. She said doctors have wondered if there’s a connection.

“We cannot ignore the elephant in the room,” she said. “The question of a synergisti­c effect between COVID-19 and any other hepatotrop­ic virus or any other injury to the liver is a very significan­t one . ... COVID-19 certainly affects the liver, and it is clear that when you have essentiall­y two hits to the liver, it’s easy to develop more or significan­t inflammati­on.”

Rathore of UF Health Jacksonvil­le said parents should exercise common sense when considerin­g whether to seek medical attention for their kids.

“A child with hepatitis can sometimes just start with a fever and not eating well and just not feeling well,” he said. “Any virus can do that, but the things that can potentiall­y alert you beforehand are if the urine becomes dark, or the stool becomes light-colored … or jaundice of the skin, or the eyes become yellow in tone.”

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