The current evidence indicates that the severity of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is lower in the pediatric population but local data are still limited. Objective: To characterize the clinical and epidemiological aspects of COVID-19 infection in patients younger than 18 years in Argentina.
Cross-sectional, observational, and analytical study of confirmed COVID-19 patients aged 0-18 years seen between March 2020 and March 2021 at 19 referral children’s hospitals of Argentina. A multivariate analysis was done to identify predictors of severe cases.
A total of 2690 COVID-19 cases were included: 77.7% lived in the Metropolitan Area of Buenos Aires; 50.1% were males; patients’ median age was 5.6 years. Of them, 90% were seen during epidemiological weeks 20-47 of 2020; 60.4% had a history of contact with COVID-19 patients; and 96.6% in their family setting. Also, 51.4% had respiratory symptoms; 61.6%, general symptoms; 18.8%, gastrointestinal symptoms; 17.1%, neurological symptoms; 7.2%, other symptoms; and 21.5% were asymptomatic. In addition, 59.4% of patients were hospitalized and 7.4% had a severe or critical course. A total of 57 patients developed multisystem inflammatory syndrome. A history of asthma, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, congenital heart disease, moderate to severe malnutrition, obesity, chronic neurological disease and/or age younger than 6 months were independent predictors of severity. Living in a vulnerable neighborhood was a protective factor.
More than half of cases referred a history of contact with COVID-19 patients in the family setting. Hospitalization was not based on clinical criteria of severity. Severity was associated with the presence of certain comorbidities.
About The Expert
Ángela Gentile
María Del Valle Juárez
Lucía Romero Bollón
Aldo D Cancellara
Marina Pasinovich
Martín Brizuela
Cristina Euliarte
Gabriela N Ensinck
Carlota Russ
Liliana Saraceni
Gabriela Tapponier
Susana Villa Nova
Andrea Falaschi
Analía Garnero
Pablo Melonari
Luciana Bellone
Alejandra Gaiano
Víctor Pebe Florian
Elizabeth Bogdanowicz
M Soledad Areso
References
PubMed