1.Cost-effectiveness analysis of Chaiyin Granules in treatment of influenza.
Li-Man DING ; Dao-Wen YANG ; Hong-Chun ZHANG ; Xiao MA ; Zhen-Gang YAN ; Sheng-Tang ZHANG ; Wu-Zhi MA ; Wei-Ge LI ; Dong-Xing WU ; Qing-Rong JIANG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2023;48(16):4529-4535
This study aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of Chaiyin Granules compared with Oseltamivir Phosphate Capsules in the treatment of influenza(exogenous wind-heat syndrome). Based on a randomized, double-blind, positive drug parallel control clinical trial, this study evaluated the pharmacoeconomics of Chaiyin Granules with cost-effectiveness analysis method. A total of 116 patients with influenza from eight hospitals(grade Ⅱ level A above) in 6 cities were selected in this study, including 78 cases in the experimental group with Chaiyin Granules and Oseltamivir Phosphate Capsules placebo, and 38 cases in the control group with Oseltamivir Phosphate Capsules and Chaiyin Granules placebo. The total cost of this study included direct medical cost, direct non-medical cost, and indirect cost. The remission time of clinical symptoms, cure time/cure rate, antipyretic onset time/complete antipyretic time, viral nucleic acid negative rate, and traditional Chinese medicine(TCM) syndrome curative effect were selected as the effect indicators for cost-effectiveness analysis. Four-quadrant diagram was used to estimate the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio. The results showed that Chaiyin Granules were not inferior to Oseltamivir Phosphate Capsules in the remission time of clinical symptoms of influenza(3.1 d vs 2.9 d, P=0.360, non-inferiority margin was 0.5 d). Compared with Oseltamivir Phosphate Capsules, Chaiyin Granules would delay the remission time of clinic symptoms of influenza for 1 d, but could save 213.9 yuan. 1 d delay in cure time could save 149.3 yuan; 1% reduction in the cure rate could save 8.2 yuan; 1 d delay in antipyretic onset time could save 295.4 yuan; 1 d delay in complete antipyretic time could save 114.3 yuan; 1% reduction in the 5-day cure rate of TCM syndrome could save 19.2 yuan. Different from other indicators, there was no statistically significant difference between two groups in the effect of negative conversion rate of viral nucleic acid, but the cost was lower and the effect was superior, and the pharmacoeconomics was not different from that of Oseltamivir Phosphate Capsules in the field of influenza treatment.
Humans
;
Antipyretics/therapeutic use*
;
Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use*
;
Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
;
Influenza, Human/drug therapy*
;
Nucleic Acids/therapeutic use*
;
Oseltamivir/therapeutic use*
;
Phosphates/therapeutic use*
;
Treatment Outcome
;
Double-Blind Method
2.Overview of Meta-analysis of Lianhua Qingwen preparations in treatment of viral diseases.
Wei-Feng LI ; Chan-Chan HU ; Ya-Li DING ; Bin YUAN
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2022;47(16):4505-4516
This study aims to obtain higher-level evidence by overviewing the Meta-analysis of Lianhua Qingwen preparations in the treatment of viral diseases including influenza, coronavirus disease 2019(COVID-19), and hand, foot and mouth disease(HFMD). CNKI, Wanfang, VIP, China Clinical Trial Registry(ChiCTR), PubMed, EMbase, Web of Science, and Cochrane Library were searched for the Meta-analysis about the treatment of viral diseases with Lianhua Qingwen preparations from the database establishment to April 1, 2022. After literature screening and data extraction, AMSTAR2 and the grading of recommendations assessment, development and evaluations(GRADE) system were used to assess the methodological quality and evidence quality, respectively, and then the efficacy and safety outcomes of Lianhua Qingwen preparations in the treatment of viral diseases were summarized. Thirteen Meta-analysis were finally included, three of which were rated as low grade by AMSTAR2 and ten as very low grade. A total of 75 outcome indicators were obtained, involving influenza, COVID-19, and HFMD. According to the GRADE scoring results, the 75 outcome indicators included 5(6.7%) high-level indicators, 18(24.0%) mediate-level indicators, 25(33.3%) low-level evidence indicators, and 27(36.0%) very low-level indicators.(1)In the treatment of influenza, Lianhua Qingwen preparations exhibited better clinical efficacy than other Chinese patent medicines and Ribavirin and had similar clinical efficacy compared with Oseltamivir. Lianhua Qingwen preparations were superior to other Chinese patent medicines, Oseltamivir, and Ribavirin in alleviating clinical symptoms. They showed no significant differences from Oseltamivir or conventional anti-influenza treatment in terms of the time to and rate of negative result of viral nucleic acid test.(2)In the treatment of COVID-19, Lianhua Qingwen preparation alone or combined with conventional treatment was superior to conventional treatment in terms of total effective rate, main symptom subsidence rate and time, fever clearance rate, duration of fever, time to fever clearance, cough subsidence rate, time to cough subsidence, fatigue subsidence rate, time to fatigue subsidence, myalgia subsidence rate, expectoration subsidence rate, chest tightness subsidence rate, etc. Lianhua Qingwen preparations no difference from conventional treatment in terms of subsiding sore throat, nausea, diarrhea, loss of appetite, headache, and dyspnea. In terms of chest CT improvement rate, rate of progression to severe case, cure time, and hospitalization time, Lianhua Qingwen alone or in combination with conventional treatment was superior to conventional treatment.(3)In the treatment of HFMD, Lianhua Qingwen Granules was superior to conventional treatment in terms of total effective rate, average fever clearance time, time to herpes subsidence, and time to negative result of viral nucleic acid test.(4)In terms of safety, Lianhua Qingwen preparations led to low incidence of adverse reactions, all of which were mild and disappeared after drug withdrawal. The available evidence suggests that in the treatment of influenza, COVID-19, and HFMD, Lianhua Qingwen preparations can relieve the clinical symptoms, shorten the hospitalization time, and improve the chest CT. They have therapeutic effect and good safety in the treatment of viral diseases. However, due to the low quality of available studies, more high-quality clinical trials are needed to support the above conclusions.
Cough
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
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Fatigue
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Fever/drug therapy*
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Humans
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Influenza, Human/drug therapy*
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Meta-Analysis as Topic
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Nonprescription Drugs/therapeutic use*
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Nucleic Acids/therapeutic use*
;
Oseltamivir/therapeutic use*
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Ribavirin/therapeutic use*
;
COVID-19 Drug Treatment
3.Systematic review and Meta-analysis of Lianhua Qingwen preparations combined with Oseltamivir in treatment of influenza.
Yu-Meng YAN ; Xiao-Jing YANG ; Chun-Xia ZHAO ; Ze-Yu LI ; Guo-Zhen ZHAO ; Yu-Hong GUO ; Bo LI ; Qing-Quan LIU
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2022;47(15):4238-4247
This study aims to explore the efficacy and safety of Lianhua Qingwen preparations combined with Oseltamivir in the treatment of influenza patients. PubMed, Cochrane Library, EMbase, SinoMed, CNKI, Wanfang, and VIP were searched for the randomized controlled trials(RCTs) involving the comparison between the influenza patients treated with Lianhua Qingwen preparations combined with Oseltamivir and those treated with Oseltamivir alone. Fever clearance time was taken as the primary outcome indicator. Clinical effective rate(markedly effective and effective), time to muscle pain relief, time to sore throat relief, time to cough relief, time to nasal congestion and runny nose relief, time to negative result of viral nucleic acid test, and adverse reactions were taken as the secondary outcome indicators. The data were extracted based on the outcome indicators and then combined. The Cochrane collaboration's tool for assessing risk of bias was used to evaluate the quality of a single RCT, and the grading of recommendations assessment, development and evaluations(GRADE) system to assess the quality of a single outcome indicator. RevMan 5.3 was employed to analyze data and test heterogeneity. Finally, 16 RCTs involving 1 629 patients were included for analysis. The Meta-analysis showed that Lianhua Qingwen preparations combined with Oseltamivir was superior to Oseltamivir alone in the treatment of influenza in terms of clinical effective rate(RR=1.16, 95%CI [1.12, 1.20], P<0.000 01), fever clearance time(SMD=-2.02, 95%CI [-2.62,-1.41], P<0.000 01), time to muscle pain relief(SMD=-2.50, 95%CI [-3.84,-1.16], P=0.000 2), time to sore throat relief(SMD=-1.40, 95%CI [-1.93,-0.85], P<0.000 01), time to cough relief(SMD=-1.81, 95%CI [-2.44,-1.19], P<0.000 01), time to nasal congestion and runny nose(SMD=-2.31, 95%CI [-3.61,-1.01], P=0.000 5), and time to negative result of viral nucleic acid test(SMD=-0.68, 95%CI [-1.19,-0.16], P=0.01). However, due to the low quality of the trials, the above conclusions need to be proved by more high-quality clinical studies. In addition, we still need to attach importance to the adverse reactions of the integrated application of Chinese and western medicines.
Cough/drug therapy*
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal/adverse effects*
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Humans
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Influenza, Human/drug therapy*
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Myalgia/drug therapy*
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Nucleic Acids/therapeutic use*
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Oseltamivir/adverse effects*
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Pharyngitis/drug therapy*
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Rhinorrhea
4.Potential treatment of COVID-19 by inhibitors of human dihydroorotate dehydrogenase.
Protein & Cell 2020;11(10):699-702
Animals
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Betacoronavirus
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Coronavirus Infections
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drug therapy
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Drug Discovery
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Drug Evaluation, Preclinical
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Enzyme Inhibitors
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therapeutic use
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Humans
;
Mice
;
Molecular Structure
;
Orthomyxoviridae Infections
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drug therapy
;
Oseltamivir
;
therapeutic use
;
Oxidoreductases
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antagonists & inhibitors
;
Pandemics
;
Pneumonia, Viral
;
drug therapy
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Pyrimidines
;
biosynthesis
5.Novel and potent inhibitors targeting DHODH are broad-spectrum antivirals against RNA viruses including newly-emerged coronavirus SARS-CoV-2.
Rui XIONG ; Leike ZHANG ; Shiliang LI ; Yuan SUN ; Minyi DING ; Yong WANG ; Yongliang ZHAO ; Yan WU ; Weijuan SHANG ; Xiaming JIANG ; Jiwei SHAN ; Zihao SHEN ; Yi TONG ; Liuxin XU ; Yu CHEN ; Yingle LIU ; Gang ZOU ; Dimitri LAVILLETE ; Zhenjiang ZHAO ; Rui WANG ; Lili ZHU ; Gengfu XIAO ; Ke LAN ; Honglin LI ; Ke XU
Protein & Cell 2020;11(10):723-739
Emerging and re-emerging RNA viruses occasionally cause epidemics and pandemics worldwide, such as the on-going outbreak of the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. Herein, we identified two potent inhibitors of human DHODH, S312 and S416, with favorable drug-likeness and pharmacokinetic profiles, which all showed broad-spectrum antiviral effects against various RNA viruses, including influenza A virus, Zika virus, Ebola virus, and particularly against SARS-CoV-2. Notably, S416 is reported to be the most potent inhibitor so far with an EC of 17 nmol/L and an SI value of 10,505.88 in infected cells. Our results are the first to validate that DHODH is an attractive host target through high antiviral efficacy in vivo and low virus replication in DHODH knock-out cells. This work demonstrates that both S312/S416 and old drugs (Leflunomide/Teriflunomide) with dual actions of antiviral and immuno-regulation may have clinical potentials to cure SARS-CoV-2 or other RNA viruses circulating worldwide, no matter such viruses are mutated or not.
Animals
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Antiviral Agents
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pharmacology
;
therapeutic use
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Betacoronavirus
;
drug effects
;
physiology
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Binding Sites
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drug effects
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Cell Line
;
Coronavirus Infections
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drug therapy
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virology
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Crotonates
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pharmacology
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Cytokine Release Syndrome
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drug therapy
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Drug Evaluation, Preclinical
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Gene Knockout Techniques
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Humans
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Influenza A virus
;
drug effects
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Leflunomide
;
pharmacology
;
Mice
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Mice, Inbred BALB C
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Orthomyxoviridae Infections
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drug therapy
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Oseltamivir
;
therapeutic use
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Oxidoreductases
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antagonists & inhibitors
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metabolism
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Pandemics
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Pneumonia, Viral
;
drug therapy
;
virology
;
Protein Binding
;
drug effects
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Pyrimidines
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biosynthesis
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RNA Viruses
;
drug effects
;
physiology
;
Structure-Activity Relationship
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Toluidines
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pharmacology
;
Ubiquinone
;
metabolism
;
Virus Replication
;
drug effects
6.Respiratory Syncytial Virus Outbreak in the Basic Military Training Camp of the Republic of Korea Air Force.
Won Ju PARK ; Seok Ju YOO ; Suk Ho LEE ; Jae Woo CHUNG ; Keun Ho JANG ; Jai Dong MOON
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2015;48(1):10-17
OBJECTIVES: An outbreak of acute febrile illness occurred in the Republic of Korea Air Force boot camp from May to July 2011. An epidemiological investigation of the causative agent, which was of a highly infective nature, was conducted. METHODS: Throat swabs were carried out and a multiplex reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay was performed to identify possible causative factors. RESULTS: The mean age of patients who had febrile illness during the study period was 20.24 years. The multiplex RT-PCR assay identified respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) as the causative agent. The main symptoms were sore throat (76.0%), sputum (72.8%), cough (72.1%), tonsillar hypertrophy (67.9%), and rhinorrhea (55.9%). The mean temperature was 38.75degreesC and the attack rate among the recruits was 15.7% (588 out of 3750 recruits), while the mean duration of fever was 2.3 days. The prognosis was generally favorable with supportive care but recurrent fever occurred in 10.1% of the patients within a month. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first epidemiological study of an RSV outbreak that developed in a healthy young adult group. In the event of an outbreak of an acute febrile illness of a highly infective nature in facilities used by a young adult group, RSV should be considered among the possible causative agents.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Antiviral Agents/therapeutic use
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Body Temperature
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Disease Outbreaks
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Humans
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Male
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Military Personnel
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Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction
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Oseltamivir/therapeutic use
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Pharynx/virology
;
RNA, Viral/chemistry/genetics/metabolism
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
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Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections/drug therapy/*epidemiology/virology
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Respiratory Syncytial Viruses/*genetics/isolation & purification
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Sputum/virology
;
Young Adult
8.Clinical characteristics of human infection with a novel avian-origin influenza A(H10N8) virus.
Wei ZHANG ; Jianguo WAN ; Kejian QIAN ; Xiaoqing LIU ; Zuke XIAO ; Jian SUN ; Zhenguo ZENG ; Qi WANG ; Jinxiang ZHANG ; Guanghui JIANG ; Cheng NIE ; Rong JIANG ; Chengzhi DING ; Ran LI ; Peter HORBY ; Zhancheng GAO
Chinese Medical Journal 2014;127(18):3238-3242
BACKGROUNDNovel influenza A viruses of avian-origin may be the precursors of pandemic strains. This descriptive study aims to introduce a novel avian-origin influenza A (H10N8) virus which can infect humans and cause severe diseases.
METHODSCollecting clinical data of three cases of human infection with a novel reassortment avian influenza A (H10N8) virus in Nanchang, Jiangxi Province, China.
RESULTSThree cases of human infection with a new reassortment avian influenza A(H10N8) virus were described, of which two were fatal cases, and one was severe case. These cases presented with severe pneumonia that progressed to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and intractable respiratory failure.
CONCLUSIONThis novel reassortment avian influenza A (H10N8) virus in China resulted in fatal human infections, and should be added to concerns in clinical practice.
Aged ; Antiviral Agents ; therapeutic use ; Female ; Fluoroquinolones ; therapeutic use ; Humans ; Imipenem ; therapeutic use ; Influenza A Virus, H10N8 Subtype ; drug effects ; pathogenicity ; Influenza, Human ; complications ; diagnosis ; drug therapy ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Oseltamivir ; therapeutic use
9.The Association between Influenza Treatment and Hospitalization-Associated Outcomes among Korean Children with Laboratory-Confirmed Influenza.
Jacqueline K LIM ; Tae Hee KIM ; Paul E KILGORE ; Allison E AIELLO ; Byung Min CHOI ; Kwang Chul LEE ; Kee Hwan YOO ; Young Hwan SONG ; Yun Kyung KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2014;29(4):485-493
There are limited data evaluating the relationship between influenza treatment and hospitalization duration. Our purpose assessed the association between different treatments and hospital stay among Korean pediatric influenza patients. Total 770 children < or = 15 yr-of-age hospitalized with community-acquired laboratory-confirmed influenza at three large urban tertiary care hospitals were identified through a retrospective medical chart review. Demographic, clinical, and cost data were extracted and a multivariable linear regression model was used to assess the associations between influenza treatment types and hospital stay. Overall, there were 81% of the patients hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed influenza who received antibiotic monotherapy whereas only 4% of the patients received oseltamivir monotherapy. The mean treatment-related charges for hospitalizations treated with antibiotics, alone or with oseltamivir, were significantly higher than those treated with oseltamivir-only (P < 0.001). Influenza patients treated with antibiotics-only and antibiotics/oseltamivir combination therapy showed 44.9% and 28.2%, respectively, longer duration of hospitalization compared to those treated with oseltamivir-only. Patients treated with antibiotics, alone or combined with oseltamivir, were associated with longer hospitalization and significantly higher medical charges, compared to patients treated with oseltamivir alone. In Korea, there is a need for more judicious use of antibiotics, appropriate use of influenza rapid testing.
Adolescent
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Anti-Bacterial Agents/*therapeutic use
;
Antigens, Viral/analysis/immunology
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Antiviral Agents/*therapeutic use
;
Child
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Child, Preschool
;
Cohort Studies
;
Demography
;
Drug Therapy, Combination
;
Female
;
Hospitalization
;
Humans
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Infant
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Infant, Newborn
;
Influenza A virus/metabolism
;
Influenza B virus/metabolism
;
Influenza, Human/*drug therapy
;
Male
;
Oseltamivir/*therapeutic use
;
Republic of Korea
;
Retrospective Studies
10.The first confirmed pediatric case with H7N9 avian influenza virus infection in China.
Mei ZENG ; Yan-feng ZHU ; Yan-ling GE ; Ai-mei XIA ; Dong-bo PU ; Hui YU ; Xiao-hong WANG ; Qi-rong ZHU
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2013;51(9):665-669
OBJECTIVETo understand the clinical and epidemiological aspects of avian influenza A (H7N9) virus infection in children.
METHODThe clinical data of the first confirmed pediatric case of avian influenza A(H7N9) virus infection were collected, and the epidemiological information, presenting symptoms, laboratory investigation, management and outcome were analyzed. The data of the pediatric cases were also compared with those of the adults cases.
RESULTThe case reported in this paper was a previously healthy 3.6-year-old boy residing in rural area of Shanghai. He had onset of fever and mild rhinorrhea on 31 March 2013 and he was afebrile and well since April 3. Influenza A (H7N9) virus was detected in his nasopharyngeal sample collected on 1 April through national Influenza-like Illness surveillance using real-time reverse transcriptase PCR and virus culture.His family raised domestic poultry with no apparent disease and there was no virological evidence of H7N9 infection. Monitoring and testing of 16 contacts had not found any secondary infection.
CONCLUSIONThe clinical course of H7N9 avian influenza virus infection in children was relatively mild as compared to adult cases. The source of infection and detail of exposure for children have not been known yet. Continued surveillance studies of mild and severe respiratory disease and subclinical infection are essential to further characterize the epidemiology and clinical spectrum of this emerging H7N9 virus infection in children.
Animals ; Child, Preschool ; China ; epidemiology ; Communicable Diseases, Emerging ; Humans ; Influenza A Virus, H7N9 Subtype ; genetics ; isolation & purification ; Influenza in Birds ; Influenza, Human ; diagnosis ; drug therapy ; virology ; Male ; Oseltamivir ; therapeutic use ; Poultry ; Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ; Retrospective Studies ; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction

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