Comparison of shedding characteristics of seasonal influenza virus (sub)types and influenza A(H1N1)pdm09; Germany, 2007-2011.

BACKGROUND: Influenza viral shedding studies provide fundamental information for preventive strategies and modelling exercises. We conducted a prospective household study to investigate viral shedding in seasonal and pandemic influenza between 2007 and 2011 in Berlin and Munich, Germany. METHODS: St...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thorsten Suess, Cornelius Remschmidt, Susanne B Schink, Brunhilde Schweiger, Alla Heider, Jeanette Milde, Andreas Nitsche, Kati Schroeder, Joerg Doellinger, Christian Braun, Walter Haas, Gérard Krause, Udo Buchholz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3519848?pdf=render
id doaj-3101dd5fe8964d588fd7667cc7550556
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3101dd5fe8964d588fd7667cc75505562020-11-25T01:40:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01712e5165310.1371/journal.pone.0051653Comparison of shedding characteristics of seasonal influenza virus (sub)types and influenza A(H1N1)pdm09; Germany, 2007-2011.Thorsten SuessCornelius RemschmidtSusanne B SchinkBrunhilde SchweigerAlla HeiderJeanette MildeAndreas NitscheKati SchroederJoerg DoellingerChristian BraunWalter HaasGérard KrauseUdo BuchholzBACKGROUND: Influenza viral shedding studies provide fundamental information for preventive strategies and modelling exercises. We conducted a prospective household study to investigate viral shedding in seasonal and pandemic influenza between 2007 and 2011 in Berlin and Munich, Germany. METHODS: Study physicians recruited index patients and their household members. Serial nasal specimens were obtained from all household members over at least eight days and tested quantitatively by qRT-PCR for the influenza virus (sub)type of the index patient. A subset of samples was also tested by viral culture. Symptoms were recorded daily. RESULTS: We recruited 122 index patients and 320 household contacts, of which 67 became secondary household cases. Among all 189 influenza cases, 12 were infected with seasonal/prepandemic influenza A(H1N1), 19 with A(H3N2), 60 with influenza B, and 98 with A(H1N1)pdm09. Nine (14%) of 65 non-vaccinated secondary cases were asymptomatic/subclinical (0 (0%) of 21 children, 9 (21%) of 44 adults; p = 0.03). Viral load among patients with influenza-like illness (ILI) peaked on illness days 1, 2 or 3 for all (sub)types and declined steadily until days 7-9. Clinical symptom scores roughly paralleled viral shedding dynamics. On the first day prior to symptom onset 30% (12/40) of specimens were positive. Viral load in 6 asymptomatic/subclinical patients was similar to that in ILI-patients. Duration of infectiousness as measured by viral culture lasted approximately until illness days 4-6. Viral load did not seem to be influenced by antiviral therapy, age or vaccination status. CONCLUSION: Asymptomatic/subclinical infections occur infrequently, but may be associated with substantial amounts of viral shedding. Presymptomatic shedding may arise in one third of cases, and shedding characteristics appear to be independent of (seasonal or pandemic) (sub)type, age, antiviral therapy or vaccination; however the power to find moderate differences was limited.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3519848?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thorsten Suess
Cornelius Remschmidt
Susanne B Schink
Brunhilde Schweiger
Alla Heider
Jeanette Milde
Andreas Nitsche
Kati Schroeder
Joerg Doellinger
Christian Braun
Walter Haas
Gérard Krause
Udo Buchholz
spellingShingle Thorsten Suess
Cornelius Remschmidt
Susanne B Schink
Brunhilde Schweiger
Alla Heider
Jeanette Milde
Andreas Nitsche
Kati Schroeder
Joerg Doellinger
Christian Braun
Walter Haas
Gérard Krause
Udo Buchholz
Comparison of shedding characteristics of seasonal influenza virus (sub)types and influenza A(H1N1)pdm09; Germany, 2007-2011.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Thorsten Suess
Cornelius Remschmidt
Susanne B Schink
Brunhilde Schweiger
Alla Heider
Jeanette Milde
Andreas Nitsche
Kati Schroeder
Joerg Doellinger
Christian Braun
Walter Haas
Gérard Krause
Udo Buchholz
author_sort Thorsten Suess
title Comparison of shedding characteristics of seasonal influenza virus (sub)types and influenza A(H1N1)pdm09; Germany, 2007-2011.
title_short Comparison of shedding characteristics of seasonal influenza virus (sub)types and influenza A(H1N1)pdm09; Germany, 2007-2011.
title_full Comparison of shedding characteristics of seasonal influenza virus (sub)types and influenza A(H1N1)pdm09; Germany, 2007-2011.
title_fullStr Comparison of shedding characteristics of seasonal influenza virus (sub)types and influenza A(H1N1)pdm09; Germany, 2007-2011.
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of shedding characteristics of seasonal influenza virus (sub)types and influenza A(H1N1)pdm09; Germany, 2007-2011.
title_sort comparison of shedding characteristics of seasonal influenza virus (sub)types and influenza a(h1n1)pdm09; germany, 2007-2011.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description BACKGROUND: Influenza viral shedding studies provide fundamental information for preventive strategies and modelling exercises. We conducted a prospective household study to investigate viral shedding in seasonal and pandemic influenza between 2007 and 2011 in Berlin and Munich, Germany. METHODS: Study physicians recruited index patients and their household members. Serial nasal specimens were obtained from all household members over at least eight days and tested quantitatively by qRT-PCR for the influenza virus (sub)type of the index patient. A subset of samples was also tested by viral culture. Symptoms were recorded daily. RESULTS: We recruited 122 index patients and 320 household contacts, of which 67 became secondary household cases. Among all 189 influenza cases, 12 were infected with seasonal/prepandemic influenza A(H1N1), 19 with A(H3N2), 60 with influenza B, and 98 with A(H1N1)pdm09. Nine (14%) of 65 non-vaccinated secondary cases were asymptomatic/subclinical (0 (0%) of 21 children, 9 (21%) of 44 adults; p = 0.03). Viral load among patients with influenza-like illness (ILI) peaked on illness days 1, 2 or 3 for all (sub)types and declined steadily until days 7-9. Clinical symptom scores roughly paralleled viral shedding dynamics. On the first day prior to symptom onset 30% (12/40) of specimens were positive. Viral load in 6 asymptomatic/subclinical patients was similar to that in ILI-patients. Duration of infectiousness as measured by viral culture lasted approximately until illness days 4-6. Viral load did not seem to be influenced by antiviral therapy, age or vaccination status. CONCLUSION: Asymptomatic/subclinical infections occur infrequently, but may be associated with substantial amounts of viral shedding. Presymptomatic shedding may arise in one third of cases, and shedding characteristics appear to be independent of (seasonal or pandemic) (sub)type, age, antiviral therapy or vaccination; however the power to find moderate differences was limited.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3519848?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT thorstensuess comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
AT corneliusremschmidt comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
AT susannebschink comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
AT brunhildeschweiger comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
AT allaheider comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
AT jeanettemilde comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
AT andreasnitsche comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
AT katischroeder comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
AT joergdoellinger comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
AT christianbraun comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
AT walterhaas comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
AT gerardkrause comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
AT udobuchholz comparisonofsheddingcharacteristicsofseasonalinfluenzavirussubtypesandinfluenzaah1n1pdm09germany20072011
_version_ 1725043981579976704