4.7 Article

Outbreak of brainstem encephalitis associated with enterovirus-A71 in Catalonia, Spain (2016): a clinical observational study in a children's reference centre in Catalonia

Journal

CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTION
Volume 23, Issue 11, Pages 874-881

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cmi.2017.03.016

Keywords

Brainstem; Encephalitis; Enterovirus; EV-A71; Molecular epidemiology; Types

Funding

  1. Spanish National Health Institute [PI15CIII-00020]
  2. Fundacion Godia
  3. Instituto Carlos III [CM14/00081]
  4. Asociacion Espanola de Pediatria (AEP) [DN040579]

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Objectives: To describe the characteristics of an outbreak of brainstem encephalitis and encephalomyelitis related to enterovirus (EV) infection in Catalonia (Spain), a setting in which these manifestations were uncommon. Methods: Clinical and microbiological data were analysed from patients with neurological symptoms associated with EV detection admitted to a reference paediatric hospital between April and June 2016. Results: Fifty-seven patients were included. Median age was 27.7 months (p25-p75 17.1-37.6). Forty-one (72%) were diagnosed with brainstem encephalitis, seven (12%) with aseptic meningitis, six (11%) with encephalitis, and three (5%) with encephalomyelitis (two out of three with cardiopulmonary failure). Fever, lethargy, and myoclonic jerks were the most common symptoms. Age younger than 12 months, higher white-blood-cell count, and higher procalcitonin levels were associated with cardiopulmonary failure. Using a PAN-EV real-time PCR, EV was detected in faeces and/or nasopharyngeal aspirate in all the patients, but it was found in cerebrospinal fluid only in patients with aseptic meningitis. EV was genotyped in 47 out of 57 and EV-A71 was identified in 40 out of 47, being the only EV type found in patients with brainstem symptoms. Most of the detected EV-A71 strains were subgenogroup C1. Intravenous immunoglobulins were used in 34 patients. Eight cases (14%) were admitted to the intensive care unit. All the patients but three, those with encephalomyelitis, showed a good clinical course and had no significant sequelae. No deaths occurred. Conclusions: The 2016 outbreak of brainstem encephalitis in Catalonia was associated with EV-A71 subgenogroup C1. Despite the clinical manifestations of serious disease, a favourable outcome was observed in the majority of patients. (C) 2017 European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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