Skip to main content

Severe hepatitis outbreak in healthy kids possibly linked to adenovirus infection, WHO officials say

 

  • Eleven countries, including the U.S., have reported a total of 169 cases of severe acute hepatitis in healthy children aged 1 month to 16 years old, with the largest outbreak in the U.K.
  • At least 17 children have required liver transplants and one patient has died, according to the WHO.
  • The World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention believe the outbreak might be linked to adenovirus, though investigations are continuing.
  • In the past, adenoviruses have been rarely associated with hepatitis in children with weak immune systems but not in healthy ones.
Adenovirus (highly contagious virus). Image made from a transmission electron microscopy view.
© Provided by CNBCAdenovirus (highly contagious virus). Image made from a transmission electron microscopy view.

An outbreak of severe hepatitis in healthy children that has caused liver failure in some kids might be linked to adenovirus infection, though further investigation is needed, World Health Organization officials said on Thursday.


Eleven countries, including the U.S., have reported at least 169 cases of severe acute hepatitis in children aged 1 month to 16 years old with the largest outbreak in the U.K, according to the latest WHO report. At least 17 children have required liver transplants and one patient has died.

Hepatitis is an inflammation of the liver most commonly caused by viruses, but medications and toxins can also trigger the condition.

"What is particularly unusual is that the majority of these children were previously healthy," Dr. Philippa Easterbrook, a WHO official who monitors hepatitis, said during a question and answer session livestreamed on the global health agency's social media Thursday.

At least 74 of the children have tested positive for adenovirus, according to the WHO. Adenoviruses are common and usually cause respiratory illness but can also result in stomach pain, pink eye and bladder infections. The severe hepatitis outbreak in kids has coincided with increased transmission of adenovirus in countries such as the U.K., according to the WHO.

"This doesn't at this stage prove that there's a causal link to these cases, but it is a promising interesting early signal that is being looked at in more detail," Easterbrook said.

Adenovirus has, in rare instances, been associated with hepatitis in children with weak immune systems, according to Dr. Richard Peabody, who leads WHO Europe's high-threat pathogens team. However, adenovirus is not a known cause of hepatitis in healthy children, according to the WHO.

"This is sort of an unusual phenomena that we're seeing and that's why we're sort of alerting parents and public health authorities about this," Peabody said.

At least 20 of the children had Covid, with 19 of them testing positive for that virus as well as adenovirus, according WHO data. Peabody said it's possible Covid also is playing a role in the hepatitis outbreak, though it's not clear and more investigation is needed to determine if that's the case.

U.K. officials first notified the WHO about an outbreak of severe acute hepatitis in children earlier this month. The most common symptoms have been liver inflammation, stomach pain, diarrhea, vomiting and jaundice, according to the WHO.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week issued a nationwide health alert after finding nine cases of hepatitis in children aged 1 to 6 years old in Alabama. They all had liver damage with some suffering liver failure, according to the CDC. The CDC also believes adenovirus may be the cause, though the public health agency said investigations are continuing.

Easterbrook said health officials have largely ruled out the hepatitis A, B, C, D and E viruses as a possible cause. Hepatitis viruses have not been detected in any of the reported cases, according to the WHO. Other viruses such as CMV and Epstein Barr also don't appear to account for the outbreak, Easterbrook said. Parents of the children so far have not reported a common exposure to a drug, toxin, food or travel destination, she said.

The WHO has also largely ruled out Covid-19 vaccination as a possible cause because a majority of the children had not receive the shots, Easterbrook said.


https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical/severe-hepatitis-outbreak-in-healthy-kids-possibly-linked-to-adenovirus-infection-who-officials-says/ar-AAWHLDj




Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Pfizer said an updated version of its COVID-19 vaccine will be 'ready in 100 days' if the new Omicron variant is resistant to its current vaccine

  Pfizer said it will be able to manufacture and distribute an updated version of its COVID-19 vaccine within 100 days if the new variant Omicron is found to be resistant to its current vaccine.  Scientists first detected the new variant in South Africa. It has since spread to several other countries, including Israel and Belgium, prompting  a spate of travel restrictions  across Europe, Asia, and  North America , Insider's Aria Bendix  reported . A health official said on Saturday that two cases of the variant have been  detected in the UK . The variant itself has multiple mutations that might make it easier for it to evade antibodies that developed in the body after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine. The mutations might also cause the variant to spread easily —  even among vaccinated people .  The World Health Organization has labeled Omicron a " variant of concern ," a distinction given to the most threatening coronavirus variants. Delta, the variant that surged all through

Texas governor bans vaccine passports from being required in state ABC News

  Thats Right States like Texas and Florida got the Vaccine Passport Conspiracy from Del Bigtree.  https://abc7.com/politics/texas-governor-bans-vaccine-passport-requirement-in-state/10491161/ AUSTIN, Texas -- Gov. Greg Abbott issued an executive order Tuesday morning prohibiting state agencies or political subdivisions in Texas from creating a "vaccine passport" requirement. Conversation has grown around  vaccine passports recently as an option that can be used for travel or even eating out . They are typically described as an app with a code that verifies if someone has been vaccinated or recently tested negative for COVID-19. They're already in use in Israel, and in development in parts of Europe. But Abbott shut that down as an option in the Lone Star State with Executive Order No. GA - 35 also prohibiting "organizations receiving public funds from requiring consumers to provide documentation of vaccine status in order to receive any service or enter any place.&q