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Something Besides COVID

I haven't been keeping up with the lay press this past week, but from my standpoint not much earth-shattering happened with the pandemic. Yes, Pfizer announced they will ask for booster authorization for 5-11 year old children, based on results from 140 children. As usual, I would recommend waiting to see the full data and the FDA appraisal before getting your hopes up. Also, ACIP has a meeting planned for April 20 to discuss and vote on booster dose recommendations. No agenda released yet, but I'm hoping they will provide a more rational and specific approach to replace the current vague 4th dose "get it if you want to" advice for the 50+ year-old crowd.

In the meantime, it's still difficult to know whether the upticks in cases across the country represent just the expected numbers when restrictions are lifted or the beginning of a true BA.2 surge. With pandemic fatigue on both the public and governmental levels, we just don't have accurate case numbers to guide us. We'll need to wait and see whether hospitalization rates start to increase which would be an indication that we're in for another rough stretch.

Depressing News About STDs

CDC reported data from 2020, a time when we were mostly in lockdown everywhere, and it's pretty depressing. Gonorrhea and syphilis increased significantly, chlamydia was about the same. Here is a look at syphilis in newborns and women of childbearing age the past few years:

Certainly my own clinical practice bears this out. Although I don't generally see adolescents for STD issues, my colleagues and I have seen plenty of referrals for congenital syphilis recently. A sad commentary on our public health system, reflecting poor infrastructure in many states dating back generations.

New Fulminant Hepatitis?

Although we don't have much information to go on yet, small clusters of what appears to be acute fulminant hepatitis in young children have been reported in the UK, Spain, and the US (Alabama). A prime suspect is adenovirus 41, usually a run of the mill infection. Investigations are still ongoing, but the clusters do not appear to be associated with the more usual viral causes (hepatitis A through E) nor with any identifiable toxin exposure. The best information comes from Scotland where officials published comprehensive but still inconclusive data on 13 children.

Adenoviruses are well known to be excreted in the nose and/or stool weeks to months following infection, so a positive PCR from these sites may not indicate causation of a current illness.

I suspect this will be figured out soon. In the meantime, frontline pediatric healthcare providers should be aware of this possibility, both to identify cases early as well as to ward off panic from parents if their child with a cold happens to have a multiplex respiratory pathogen panel positive for adenovirus, a very common occurrence. Of course the best way to ward this off is to not order this test in the first place - it isn't necessary for routine illness!

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