Characterizing the risk of respiratory syncytial virus in infants with older siblings: a population-based birth cohort study

Date

2017

Authors

Jacoby, Peter
Glass, Kathryn
Moore, Hannah

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Abstract

From a population-based birth cohort of 245 249 children born in Western Australia during 1996–2005, we used linkage of laboratory and birth record datasets to obtain data including all respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) detections during infancy from a subcohort of 87 981 singleton children born in the Perth metropolitan area from 2000 to 2004. Using log binomial regression, we found that the risk of infant RSV detection increases with the number of older siblings, with those having ⩾3 older siblings experiencing almost three times the risk (relative risk 2·83, 95% confidence interval 2·46–3·26) of firstborn children. We estimate that 45% of the RSV detections in our subcohort were attributable to infection from an older sibling. The sibling effect was significantly higher for those infants who were younger during the season of peak risk (winter) than those who were older. Although older siblings were present in our cohort, they had very few RSV detections which could be temporally linked to an infant's infection. We conclude that RSV infection in older children leads to less severe symptoms but is nevertheless an important source of infant infection. Our results lend support to a vaccination strategy which includes family members in order to provide maximum protection for newborn babies.

Description

Keywords

Epidemiology, household, respiratory syncytial virus, vaccine policy development

Citation

Source

Epidemiology and Infection

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

CC BY

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