Covid Reference

Page 479

Pediatrics

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479

4th, 2020; only 128 were admitted to 66 hospitals, only one child died (Armann 2020). The European Surveillance System (TESSy) collects data from EU/EEA countries and the UK on laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19. Out of 576,024 laboratory confirmed COVID-19 cases 0,7% were 0-4 years, 0,6% 5-9 years, 0,9% 10-14 years (https://covid19-surveillance-report.ecdc.europa.eu). The multicentre cohort study (82 participating health-care institutions across 25 European countries), Paediatric Tuberculosis research Network (ptbnet) confirmed that COVID-19 is generally a mild disease in children. Of 582 children and adolescents (median age 5.0 years, 25% with pre-existing conditions) with PCR-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection, 363 (62%) were admitted to hospital and 48 (8%) required ICU admission. Significant risk factors for requiring ICU admission in multivariate analyses were being younger than 1 month (odds ratio 5.1), male sex (2.1) and pre-existing medical conditions (3.3). Four children died (Götzinger 2020).

Natural course and risk factors for complications The incubation period is believed to be 3-7 days (range 1-14 days) (She 2020), the clinical onset 5-8 days after infection with the virus. Children often have an asymptomatic or less severe COVID-19 disease course than adults (Zimmermann 2020, Parri 2020). Among a total of 100 children with SARSCoV-2 from Italy, 21% were asymptomatic, 58% had mild disease, 19% had moderate disease, 1% had severe disease, and 1% were in critical condition (Parri 2020). Due to the paucity of data it is as yet unclear which group of children may be at a higher risk for development of complications, e.g. children with underlying chronic pulmonary or cardiac disease, severe neurologic deficits, immunosuppressed or critically ill children, etc. Analogous to influenza there might be genetic susceptibility in some children (see below, pathophysiology, Clohisey 2019). Interestingly, in a flash survey from 25 countries with 10,000 children with cancer at risk and 200 tested, only 9 were found to be CoV-2 positive. They were asymptomatic or had mild disease (Hrusak 2020). Even in the severely immunosuppressed and in children with significant cardiac and pulmonary comorbidities COVID-19 can be overcome (Dinkelbach 2020). In The European Surveillance System (TESSy) deaths among children aged below 15 years are rare, 4 out of 44,695 (0.009%) were reported. The rate of hospitalization was higher in children under the age of five especially in infants compared to persons aged 5-29. However, it is believed that the threshold for admission is lower in young children. A severe course requiring ad-

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Articles inside

References

1hr
pages 497-554

Management

10min
pages 491-496

Diagnosis and classification

11min
pages 484-490

Transplantation

4min
pages 472-473

Transmission

4min
pages 482-483

Pathophysiology and immunopathology

4min
pages 480-481

Natural course and risk factors for complications

2min
page 479

Epidemiology of COVID-19 in children

2min
page 478

Cancer

8min
pages 468-471

Immunosuppression (other than HIV

3min
pages 466-467

HIV infection

6min
pages 463-465

COPD and smoking

4min
pages 461-462

Hypertension and cardiovascular co-morbidities

14min
pages 452-458

Diabetes mellitus

4min
pages 459-460

References

6min
pages 447-451

Special situations in severe COVID-19

3min
pages 445-446

References

25min
pages 429-440

Spotlight: The situation in a German COVID-19 hospital

4min
pages 443-444

Outlook and Recommendations

1min
page 428

4. Immunomodulators

19min
pages 415-424

Other treatments for COVID-19 (with unknown or unproven mechanisms of action

5min
pages 425-427

3. Monoclonal Antibodies and Convalescent Plasma

13min
pages 408-414

2. Various antiviral agents

5min
pages 405-407

1. Inhibitors of the viral RNA synthesis

11min
pages 399-404

Monitoring, treatment options

3min
pages 391-392

Studies with objectifiable tests

3min
pages 389-390

Reactivations, reinfections

2min
page 366

Outcome

27min
pages 352-365

Clinical classification

1min
page 351

Laboratory findings

6min
pages 347-350

References

21min
pages 324-332

Asymptomatic cases

4min
pages 334-335

Radiology

6min
pages 321-323

Incubation period

1min
page 333

Symptoms

21min
pages 336-346

Diagnosis

36min
pages 303-320

References

55min
pages 277-302

Outlook

5min
pages 272-276

Single Vaccines

24min
pages 247-261

Coming vaccines

8min
pages 267-271

Special Topics

9min
pages 241-246

Approved Vaccines

2min
pages 223-224

References

21min
pages 211-222

Outlook

1min
page 210

Transmission

1min
page 187

Epidemiology

11min
pages 175-186

Summary – 13 February

1min
page 173

Genomic Structure and Variation

4min
pages 164-166

References

8min
pages 167-172

Origin and Evolution

4min
pages 158-159

Introduction

1min
page 174

History

4min
pages 154-155

References

20min
pages 136-152

Conclusion

1min
page 135

Introduction

31min
pages 117-133

Containment or mitigation of COVID-19?

1min
page 134

References

40min
pages 99-116

Outlook

1min
page 98

Prevention

3min
pages 96-97

End of Quarantine

1min
page 95

Transmission Event

26min
pages 82-94

References

31min
pages 54-68

Summary

1min
page 69

Routes of Transmission

16min
pages 73-81

Outlook

3min
pages 52-53

The 2020 Lockdowns

7min
pages 48-51

Person-to-person transmission

2min
page 72

Special Aspects of the Pandemic

15min
pages 38-46

The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic: Past and Future

2min
page 47
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