首页> 外文期刊>Health technology assessment: HTA >Predictive clinicopathological features derived from systematic autopsy examination of patients who died with A/H1N1 influenza infection in the UK 2009-10 pandemic.
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Predictive clinicopathological features derived from systematic autopsy examination of patients who died with A/H1N1 influenza infection in the UK 2009-10 pandemic.

机译:预测临床病理的特点推导出从系统的解剖检查的患者人死于甲型H1N1流感的感染英国2009 - 10大流行。

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BACKGROUND: From April 2009 to January 2010, the pandemic of A/H1N1 influenza affected the UK. There were > 30,000 infections and 457 deaths (all ages). Reports from other countries had indicated that certain comorbidities were associated with a higher risk of death from H1N1 infection, and there was a need to identify these factors in the UK population as knowledge of them could lead to improved treatment in the current epidemic and reduced mortality in future epidemics. OBJECTIVES: To gather all the available clinical pathology information from autopsies performed on patients dying with known or suspected influenza A/H1N1 infection, across the UK. To evaluate comorbidities present in these deceased patients; correlate them with the H1N1-related pathology and treatment-associated pathology, determine their relative contributions and estimate the significant features associated with death. METHODS: To obtain the autopsy reports, standard request letters were sent by e-mail to all histopathologists in the UK on the Royal College of Pathologists list, all the coroners' jurisdictions in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, and to procurators fiscal in Scotland. The letters asked for autopsy reports of the autopsied deceased who included: those with H1N1 infection, proven before or after death, and those in whom swine flu was unproven but most likely to have been present; those in whom H1N1 was a minor pathology, as well as those in whom it was the immediate cause of death; those whose cause of death mentioned 'swine flu', 'swine influenza' or 'H1N1 infection'; and those of any age from infancy to old age. RESULTS: Sixty-eight autopsy reports were received: 19 children (0-15 years) and 49 adults (16 + years). All but two autopsies were medico-legal, and only two (3% of the total) were consented. This sample thus represents 15% of the known 457 deaths from H1N1. Median age for children at death was 6 years, for adults it was 41 years. Deaths in children were associated with congenital diseases (47%, 9/19), particularly of the heart and central nervous system. The autopsied children were not obese. Death in adults were associated with pregnancy (three cases in the study, but nationally 12/457 H1N1-associated deaths were noted), obesity (50% of adults had a body mass index >/= 30 kg/m(2)) and chronic respiratory disease (12%, 6/49 adults). Diabetes did not emerge as a risk factor for death, but learning difficulties did. Nearly all the deaths (94%, 64/68) were a consequence of H1N1 infection in the respiratory tract. In more than one-third (41%, 28/68) of the deaths, bacterial secondary infection was the significant complication; the pneumococcus was the most common agent identified (25%, 7/28). LIMITATIONS: This review is an incomplete medical study of what happened during the epidemic, and the small sample number (68 reports from 457 deaths) limits further speculation. We have no true measure of whether the cases selected for autopsy are representative of the total deaths in terms of pathology and comorbidities. CONCLUSIONS: The major comorbidities associated with death from H1N1 infection were obesity, chronic respiratory disease and pregnancy. Young age at death was confirmed. Congenital disease in children and learning difficulties in adults were also important, but diabetes was not. This methodology of gathering data for research has potential for use in other public health questions, but is dependent on the co-operation of the medico-legal services. These results reinforce the need to enquire further into the pathogenesis of severe and fatal H1N1 disease, and the circumstances of clinical presentation and rapid evaluation in a time of epidemic influenza. FUNDING: The National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment programme.
机译:背景:从2009年4月到2010年1月甲型H1N1流感大流行影响的英国。>有30000感染和457人死亡(所有年龄的)。表明某些并发症死于甲型H1N1流感的风险更高感染,需要识别这些在英国人口因素的知识可能导致改进的治疗在目前的未来的流行和降低死亡率流行病。临床病理学信息可用尸体解剖进行患者死亡或疑似流感A / H1N1感染英国。这些死去的病人;H1N1-related病理学和治疗引起病理学,确定它们的相对贡献和评估相关的重要功能与死亡。报告,请求信件发送的标准电子邮件给所有histopathologists在英国皇家学院的病理学家列表,所有的验尸官的司法辖区在英格兰,威尔士和北爱尔兰,检察官财政苏格兰。的解剖死者包括:H1N1感染,证明之前或之后死亡,那些在猪流感是未经证实的但最有可能已经存在;人H1N1是轻微的病理,以及那些在他们死亡的直接原因;那些死因提到“猪流感”,“猪流感”或“甲型H1N1流感病毒感染的;任何年龄层,从婴儿到老年。六十八收到尸检报告:19孩子(0-15年)和49岁成年人(16 +年)。但是有2个法医尸检,两个(占总数的3%)同意了。因此代表了已知457人死亡的15%甲型H1N1流感。年,成年人是41年。孩子们与先天性疾病相关(47%, 9/19),尤其是心脏的中枢神经系统。没有肥胖。怀孕(三个案例研究中,但是全国12/457 H1N1-associated死亡指出),肥胖(50%的成年人身体质量指数> / = 30公斤/米(2))和慢性呼吸道疾病的成年人(12%,6/49)。成为死亡的一个危险因素,但学习困难了。64/68) H1N1病毒感染的结果呼吸道。(41%, 28/68)的死亡,细菌的二次感染的重要并发症;肺炎球菌是最常见的代理确认(25%, 7/28)。不完整的医学研究期间发生了什么事流行和小样本(68报告457例死亡)进一步限制投机。尸体解剖的情况下选择的代表病理学和死亡人数共病。从甲型H1N1流感并发症和死亡联系在一起慢性呼吸道感染是肥胖,疾病和妊娠。证实。学习困难的成年人也糖尿病并不重要,但是。收集数据的研究潜力使用在其他公共卫生问题,但法医的依赖于合作服务。进一步调查严重的发病机制和致命的甲型H1N1流感疾病的情况临床表现和快速评估的流感流行。健康研究所卫生技术评估项目。

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