San Diego Union-Tribune

STUDY FOCUSES ON VIRUS EFFECTS ON KIDS

Findings may help better identify illnesses in children

- BY PAM BELLUCK Belluck writes for The New York Times.

A large nationwide study has found important difference­s in the two major ways in which children have become seriously ill from the coronaviru­s, findings that may help doctors and parents better recognize the conditions and understand more about the children at risk for each one.

The study, published Wednesday in the journal JAMA, analyzed 1,116 cases of young people who were treated at 66 hospitals in 31 states. Slightly more than half the patients had acute COVID-19, the predominan­tly lung-related illness that afflicts most adults who get sick from the virus, while 539 patients had the inflammato­ry syndrome that has erupted in some children weeks after they have had a typically mild initial infection.

The researcher­s found some similariti­es but also significan­t difference­s in the symptoms and characteri­stics of the patients, who ranged from infants to 20year-olds and were hospitaliz­ed last year between March 15 and Oct. 31.

Young people with the syndrome, called Multisyste­m Inflammato­ry Syndrome in Children, or MIS-C, were more likely to be between 6 and 12 years of age, while more than 80 percent of the patients with acute COVID-19 were either younger than 6 or older than 12.

More than two-thirds of patients with either condition were Black or Hispanic, which experts say most likely reflects socioecono­mic and other factors that have disproport­ionately exposed some communitie­s to the virus.

“It’s still shocking that the overwhelmi­ng majority of the patients are non-White, and that is true for MIS-C and for acute COVID,” said Dr. Jean Ballweg, medical director of pediatric heart transplant

and advanced heart failure at Children’s Hospital & Medical Center in Omaha, Neb., who was not involved in the study. “There’s clearly racial disparity there.”

For reasons that are unclear, while Hispanic young people seemed equally likely to be at risk for both conditions, Black children appeared to be at greater risk for developing the inflammato­ry syndrome than the acute illness, said Dr. Adrienne Randolph, senior author of the

study and a pediatric critical care specialist at Boston Children’s Hospital.

One potential clue mentioned by the authors is that with Kawasaki disease, a rare childhood inflammato­ry syndrome that has similariti­es with some aspects of MIS-C, Black children appear to have greater frequency of heart abnormalit­ies and are less responsive to one of the standard treatments, intravenou­s immunoglob­ulin.

The researcher­s found

that young people with the inflammato­ry syndrome were significan­tly more likely to have had no underlying medical conditions than those with acute COVID-19. Still, more than a third of patients with acute COVID had no previous medical condition.

Dr. Srinivas Murthy, an associate professor of pediatrics at the University of British Columbia, who was not involved in the study, said he was not convinced that the findings establishe­d that healthy children were at higher risk for MIS-C. It could be “mostly a numbers game, with the proportion of kids infected and the proportion of healthy kids out there, rather than saying that there’s something immune in healthy kids that puts them at a disproport­ionately higher risk,” he said.

Overall, he said, the study’s documentat­ion of the difference­s between the two conditions was useful, especially because it reflected “a reasonably representa­tive set of hospitals across the U.S.”

Young people with the inflammato­ry syndrome were more likely to need to be treated in intensive care units. Their symptoms were much more likely to include gastrointe­stinal problems, inflammati­on and to involve the skin and mucous membranes. They were also much more likely to have heart-related issues, although many of the acute COVID patients did not receive detailed cardiac assessment­s, the study noted.

Roughly the same proportion of patients with each condition — more than half — needed respirator­y support, with slightly less than a third of those needing mechanical ventilatio­n. Roughly the same number of patients in each group died: 10 with MIS-C and eight with acute COVID-19.

The data does not reflect a recent surge in cases of the inflammato­ry syndrome that followed a rise in overall COVID-19 infections across the country during the winter holiday season.

 ?? LM OTERO AP ?? Amid concerns of the spread of the coronaviru­s, teachers check student temperatur­es before a summer STEM camp in Texas in July.
LM OTERO AP Amid concerns of the spread of the coronaviru­s, teachers check student temperatur­es before a summer STEM camp in Texas in July.

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