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Epidemiological and clinical features of Croatian children and adolescents with a PCR-confirmed coronavirus disease 2019: differences between the first and second epidemic wave
Authors:Nina Krajcar,Lorna Stemberger Marić  ,Anja Š  urina,Sanja Kureč     Filipović  ,Vladimir Trkulja,Srđ  an Roglić  ,Goran Teš  ović  
Abstract:MethodsData on patients aged ≤19 years with a positive SARS-CoV-2 PCR test recorded in the period March 12-May 12 (first wave) and June 19-July 19, 2020 (second wave) were retrospectively analyzed. The periods were separated by several weeks with no incident cases.ResultsWe analyzed data on 289 children and adolescents (6.5% of all cases; incidence rate [IR] = 3.54, 95% confidence interval [CI] 3.14-3.97/million person-days), 124 in the first wave (IR = 2.27) and 165 in the second wave (IR = 6.37): IRR second/first = 2.71 (2.13-3.44). During the first wave, the incidence was highest in infants (IR = 3.48), while during the second wave it progressively increased to IR = 7.37 in 15-19-year olds. Family members were the key epidemiological contacts (72.6% cases), particularly during the first wave (95.8% vs 56.3%). Overall, 41.3% patients were asymptomatic, 25.3% in the first and 52.6% in the second wave. Age 15-19 years (vs younger) was associated with a higher (RR = 1.26, 1.02-1.54) and infection in the second wave with a lower probability (RR = 0.66, 0.53-0.81) of being symptomatic. The most common symptoms were fever, cough, and rhinorrhea. In children aged ≥7 years, headache, anosmia/ageusia, and sore throat were also recorded. Only one child suffered a severe disease. All but 18 (7.8%) children were treated only symptomatically, and all fully recovered.ConclusionA large proportion of SARS-CoV-2 PCR-positive children/adolescents were asymptomatic. The associated disease was predominantly mild, comparably so in the first and second pandemic wave.

Since the late December 2019, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by the novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has spread quickly worldwide and as of early December accounts for more than 65 million cases diagnosed in more than 200 countries (1). At this point, the most affected countries in Europe are Russia, Spain, France, United Kingdom (UK), and Italy with consequently the highest mortality rates. The first case in Croatia was reported in the late February 2020, and within the next two months the infection expanded nationwide. During this first epidemic wave, Croatia was under a one-month lockdown, which rapidly decreased the disease incidence, and only a few newly diagnosed cases were reported between May 25 and June18, 2020. Easing of restrictions increased the incidence in late June, causing a second wave of COVID-19 in Croatia, with >147 000 cases reported so far (1,2).Over the last two decades, there were two other coronavirus outbreaks. Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus appeared in 2002, affecting around 8000 people, with 10% mortality. Children (4 months-17 years) accounted for <0.02% of total cases, and there was no reported death in this age group. During the outbreak of the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, around 2300 people were infected, and children (<19 years of age) were rarely affected as well (2% of total cases; 2 reported deaths) (3,4). COVID-19 has exhibited a similar epidemiological pattern. Although early reports from China, Italy, and the United States (US) suggested that children and adolescents accounted for only 1%-2% of the overall COVID-19 cases (5-7), later reports around the world indicated a higher proportions of pediatric cases, between 1%-8% (8-10). Children of all ages can be affected by SARS-CoV-2 infection, but in contrast to other respiratory viruses, they usually suffer a mild or asymptomatic infection. Compared with adults, severe infections and fatal outcomes in children are rare, and several immunopathological mechanisms could be responsible for such differences in disease severity (11). Although many studies have reviewed the features of adults with COVID-19, overall data regarding pediatric cases are scarce, and most of them are reports from China and the US, with only a few studies describing disease in children from European countries.We aimed to describe epidemiological and clinical features of children and adolescents with COVID-19 confirmed by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test for SARS-CoV-2 in Croatia and to assess potential differences between the first (March-May 2020) and second (on-going) pandemic wave (June-July 2020).
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