TY - JOUR
T1 - Human metapneumovirus reinfection among children in Thailand determined by ELISA using purified soluble fusion protein
AU - Pavlin, Julie A.
AU - Hickey, Andrew C.
AU - Ulbrandt, Nancy
AU - Chan, Yee Peng
AU - Endy, Timothy P.
AU - Boukhvalova, Marina S.
AU - Chunsuttiwat, Supamit
AU - Nisalak, Ananda
AU - Libraty, Daniel H.
AU - Green, Sharone
AU - Rothman, Alan L.
AU - Ennis, Francis A.
AU - Jarman, Richard
AU - Gibbons, Robert V.
AU - Broder, Christopher C.
PY - 2008/9/15
Y1 - 2008/9/15
N2 - Background. Human metapneumovirus (hMPV) is a newly discovered paramyxovirus that causes acute respiratory illness. Despite apparent near-universal exposure during early childhood, immunity is transient. Methods. An indirect screening enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using a recombinant soluble fusion (F) glycoprotein derived from hMPV was used to test for anti-F IgG in 1380 pairs of acute- and convalescent-stage serum samples collected from children in Kamphaeng Phet, Thailand. Results. Of the 1380 serum sample pairs tested, 1376 (99.7%) showed evidence of prior infection with hMPV. Sixty-six paired specimens demonstrated a ≥4-fold rise in titer, for an overall reinfection rate of 4.9%. Two children demonstrated evidence of an initial infection. Forty-eight of the 68 new infections or reinfections occurred in 2000, accounting for 13.2% of all nonflaviviral febrile illnesses in the study population in that year. Of 68 positive cases, 85.3% complained of cough and 66.2% complained of rhinorrhea, compared with 61.4% and 49.0% of negative cases, respectively (P < .01). All positive samples were also tested for an increase in titer of antibodies to respiratory syncytial virus F, and 27% exhibited a ≥4-fold rise. Conclusion. These results demonstrate that hMPV reinfections cause illness at a rate equal to that seen for initial infections. hMPV may have a more significant impact in older children than previously realized and may be the cause of significant outbreaks in this population.
AB - Background. Human metapneumovirus (hMPV) is a newly discovered paramyxovirus that causes acute respiratory illness. Despite apparent near-universal exposure during early childhood, immunity is transient. Methods. An indirect screening enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using a recombinant soluble fusion (F) glycoprotein derived from hMPV was used to test for anti-F IgG in 1380 pairs of acute- and convalescent-stage serum samples collected from children in Kamphaeng Phet, Thailand. Results. Of the 1380 serum sample pairs tested, 1376 (99.7%) showed evidence of prior infection with hMPV. Sixty-six paired specimens demonstrated a ≥4-fold rise in titer, for an overall reinfection rate of 4.9%. Two children demonstrated evidence of an initial infection. Forty-eight of the 68 new infections or reinfections occurred in 2000, accounting for 13.2% of all nonflaviviral febrile illnesses in the study population in that year. Of 68 positive cases, 85.3% complained of cough and 66.2% complained of rhinorrhea, compared with 61.4% and 49.0% of negative cases, respectively (P < .01). All positive samples were also tested for an increase in titer of antibodies to respiratory syncytial virus F, and 27% exhibited a ≥4-fold rise. Conclusion. These results demonstrate that hMPV reinfections cause illness at a rate equal to that seen for initial infections. hMPV may have a more significant impact in older children than previously realized and may be the cause of significant outbreaks in this population.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=51749097360&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1086/591186
DO - 10.1086/591186
M3 - Article
C2 - 18680407
AN - SCOPUS:51749097360
SN - 0022-1899
VL - 198
SP - 836
EP - 842
JO - Journal of Infectious Diseases
JF - Journal of Infectious Diseases
IS - 6
ER -