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Prevalence of groups A and C rotavirus antibodies in infants with biliary atresia and cholestatic controls

Authors :
Robert H. Yolken
Peter F. Whitington
Kathleen B. Schwarz
Maria Grazia Clemente
Baoming Jiang
Umesh D. Parashar
John T. Patton
Trivellore E. Raghunathan
Source :
The Journal of pediatrics. 166(1)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

To analyze the prevalence of acute asymptomatic group A and C rotavirus (RV-A and RV-C) infection in neonates with cholestasis.Participants were infants180 days of age with cholestasis (serum direct or conjugated bilirubin20% of total and ≥2 mg/dL) enrolled in the Childhood Liver Disease Research and Education Network during RV season (December-May). Forty infants with biliary atresia (BA), age 62 ± 29 days (range, 4.7-13 weeks) and 38 infants with cholestasis, age 67 ± 44 days (range, 3-15.8 weeks) were enrolled.At enrollment, RV-A IgM positivity rates did not differ between infants with BA (10%) vs those without (18%) (P = .349). RV-C IgM was positive in 0% of infants with BA vs 3% in those without BA (P = .49). RV-A IgG was lower in infants with BA: 51 ± 39 vs 56 ± 44 enzyme-linked immunoassay unit, P = .045 but this difference may lack biological relevance as maternal RV-A IgG titers were similar between groups. Infant RV-A IgM titers at 2-6 months follow-up increased markedly vs at presentation in both infants with BA (50 ± 30 vs 9 ± 9) and those without (43 ± 18 vs 16 ± 20 enzyme-linked immunoassay unit) (P.0001), without differences between groups.RV-A infection in the first 6 months of life is common in infants with cholestasis of any cause. RV-A could have different pathogenetic effects by initiating different hepatic immune responses in infants with vs without BA or could lack pathogenetic significance.

Details

ISSN :
10976833
Volume :
166
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7d760f14698f5f1abbe6157d1329afed