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Respiratory Viruses in Patients With Hematological Malignancy in Boreal Autumn/Winter 2023-2024: EPICOVIDEHA-EPIFLUEHA Report.

Authors :
Salmanton-García J
Marchesi F
Navrátil M
Piukovics K
Del Principe MI
Criscuolo M
Bilgin YM
Fracchiolla NS
Vena A
Romano A
Falces-Romero I
Sgherza N
Heras-Fernando I
Biernat MM
Petzer V
Žák P
Weinbergerová B
Samarkos M
Erben N
van Praet J
López-García A
Labrador J
Lahmer T
Drgoňa Ľ
Merelli M
Cuccaro A
Martín-Pérez S
Dávila-Valls J
Farina F
Cattaneo C
Pinczés LI
Magyari F
Espigado I
Buquicchio C
Vinh DC
Stoma I
Čerňan M
Prezioso L
Papa MV
Plantefeve G
Khedr RA
Batinić J
Magliano G
Erdem S
Khostelidi S
Čolović N
Nappi D
García-Ramírez P
Góra J
Callejas-Charavia M
Tłusty J
Bakker M
Wojtyniak E
Antić D
Magdziak A
Dargenio M
Idrizović L
Pantić N
Stojanoski Z
Eisa N
Otašević V
Marchetti M
Mackenzie E
Garcia-Vidal C
Aujayeb A
Almasari A
Miranda-Castillo C
Gavriilaki E
Coppola N
Busca A
Adžić-Vukičević T
Schönlein M
Hersby DS
Gräfe SK
Glenthøj A
Aiello TF
Cvetanoski M
Mitrović M
Cerchione C
Prin R
Varricchio G
Arellano E
Córdoba R
Mayer J
Víšek B
Wolf D
Anastasopoulou AN
Delia M
Musto P
Leotta D
Bavastro M
Limongelli A
Sciumè M
van den Ven L
Fianchi L
Brunetti SC
Drozd-Sokołowska J
Dąbrowska-Iwanicka A
Cornely OA
Pagano L
Source :
American journal of hematology [Am J Hematol] 2024 Dec 23. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Dec 23.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Ahead of Print

Abstract

Community-acquired respiratory viral infections (CARV) significantly impact patients with hematological malignancies (HM), leading to high morbidity and mortality. However, large-scale, real-world data on CARV in these patients is limited. This study analyzed data from the EPICOVIDEHA-EPIFLUEHA registry, focusing on patients with HM diagnosed with CARV during the 2023-2024 autumn-winter season. The study assessed epidemiology, clinical characteristics, risk factors, and outcomes. The study examined 1312 patients with HM diagnosed with CARV during the 2023-2024 autumn-winter season. Of these, 59.5% required hospitalization, with 13.5% needing ICU admission. The overall mortality rate was 10.6%, varying by virus: parainfluenza (21.3%), influenza (8.8%), metapneumovirus (7.1%), RSV (5.9%), or SARS-CoV-2 (5.0%). Poor outcomes were significantly associated with smoking history, severe lymphopenia, secondary bacterial infections, and ICU admission. This study highlights the severe risk CARV poses to patients with HM, especially those undergoing active treatment. The high rates of hospitalization and mortality stress the need for better prevention, early diagnosis, and targeted therapies. Given the severe outcomes with certain viruses like parainfluenza, tailored strategies are crucial to improving patient outcomes in future CARV seasons.<br /> (© 2024 The Author(s). American Journal of Hematology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1096-8652
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of hematology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39715069
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajh.27565