The diversity in the clinical features of children hospitalized with COVID‐19 during the nonvariant, Alpha (B.1.1.7), Delta (B.1.617.2), and Omicron (B.1.1.529) variant periods of SARS CoV‐2: Caution for neurological symptoms in Omicron variant

Author:

Sahin Aslıhan1ORCID,Karadag‐Oncel Eda1,Buyuksen Osman2,Ekemen‐Keles Yildiz1ORCID,Ustundag Gulnihan1,Elvan‐Tuz Aysegul1ORCID,Tasar Selin1ORCID,Didinmez‐Taskirdi Elif2,Baykan Muge2,Kara‐Aksay Ahu1,Yilmaz Nisel3,Olgac‐Dundar Nihal24,Yilmaz Dilek15

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases Health Sciences University Tepecik Training and Research Hospital Izmir Turkey

2. Division of Pediatric Neurology Disease Health Sciences University Tepecik Training and Research Hospital Izmir Turkey

3. Department of Medical Microbiology Health Sciences University Tepecik Training and Research Hospital Izmir Turkey

4. Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Neurology Diseases Izmir Katip Celebi University Faculty of Medicine Izmir Turkey

5. Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases Izmir Katip Celebi University Faculty of Medicine Izmir Turkey

Abstract

AbstractSince the COVID‐19 pandemic began, various severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 variants have been identified with different characteristics than the nonvariant strain. We retrospectively evaluated the demographic and clinical differences in the cohort of hospitalized COVID‐19 children (1 month–18 years old) between March 11, 2020, and September 31, 2022, by the time the variants identified in our country predominate. Bonferroni post hoc analysis was performed to compare the differences between the periods. Of the 283 children in this study, 142 (50.2%) were females. The median age was 36 (interquartile range [IQR]: 7–132) months. Sixty‐three (22.2%) patients were hospitalized in the nonvariant period, 24 (8.5%) in the Alpha period, 93 (32.9%) in the Delta period, and 103 (36.4%) in the Omicron period. Fever was the most common symptom in all groups, with no statistically significant differences (p = 0.25). In the Omicron period, respiratory and gastrointestinal symptoms decreased, and neurological symptoms increased significantly compared to other periods: [respiratory symptoms; nonvariant (65.1%) vs. Omicron (41.7%), (p = 0.024)], [gastrointestinal symptoms; Delta (41.9%) vs. Omicron (22.3%), (p = 0.018), [neurological symptoms; Delta (14.5%) vs. Omicron (31.1%), (p = 0.03]. Altered mental status and seizures were more common during the Omicron period compared to the pre‐Omicron (nonvariant, Alpha, and Delta) period (p = 0.017 and p = 0.005, respectively). Although the main symptoms in children with COVID‐19 were fever and respiratory symptoms, an increase in severe neurological manifestations was seen throughout the Omicron variant period.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Virology

Reference34 articles.

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5. GISAID. hCoV‐19 variants dashboard.2022. Accessed January 1 2023.https://gisaid.org/hcov-19-variants-dashboard/

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