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Impact of Respiratory Syncytial Virus on Child, Caregiver, and Family Quality of Life in the United States: Systematic Literature Review and Analysis( )

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 226, Issue SUPPL 2, Pages S236-S245

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiac183

Keywords

caregiver; infant; premature; quality-adjusted life-year (QALYs); quality of life; respiratory syncytial virus (RSV); systematic review; United States; utility

Funding

  1. Sanofi
  2. AstraZeneca

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This study systematically reviewed and analyzed the burden of illness from respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) among infants. The results indicated that RSV reduces the quality of life of children, caregivers, and families. However, the existing data mainly focus on hospitalized premature infants, and more research is needed for full-term healthy children.
To describe the burden of illness from respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) among infants, we systematically reviewed literature and performed a systematic analysis on quality of life and health utilities attributable to this disease. Background Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), a leading cause of lower respiratory tract infection in US children, reduces quality of life (QOL) of children, their caregivers, and families. Methods We conducted a systematic literature review in PubMed, EconLit, and other databases in the United States of articles published since 2000, derived utility lost per RSV episode from cohort studies, and performed a systematic analysis. Results From 2262 unique citations, 35 received full-text review and 7 met the inclusion criteria (2 cohort studies, 4 modeling studies, and 1 synthesis). Pooled data from the 2 cohort studies (both containing only hospitalized premature infants) gave quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) losses per episode of 0.0173 at day 38. From the cohort study that also assessed caregivers' QOL, we calculated net QALYs lost directly attributable to RSV per nonfatal episode from onset to 60 days after onset for the child, caregiver, child-and-caregiver dyad of 0.0169 (167% over prematurity alone), 0.0031, and 0.0200, respectively. Conclusion Published data on QOL of children in the United States with RSV are scarce and consider only premature hospitalized infants, whereas most RSV episodes occur in children who were born at term and were otherwise healthy. QOL studies are needed beyond hospitalized premature infants.

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