Journal article
Respiratory viruses in adults hospitalised with Community-Acquired Pneumonia during the non-winter months in Melbourne: Routine diagnostic practice may miss large numbers of influenza and respiratory syncytial virus infections
LA Desmond, MA Lloyd, SA Ryan, ED Janus, HA Karunajeewa
Communicable Diseases Intelligence 2018 | AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT, DEPT HEALTH & AGEING | Published : 2019
Abstract
Background: Community-Acquired Pneumonia (CAP) is one of the highest health burden conditions in Australia. Disease notifications and other data from routine diagnosis suffers from selection bias that may misrepresent the true contribution of various aetiological agents. However existing Australian prospective studies of CAP aetiology have either under-represented elderly patients, not utilised Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) diagnostics or been limited to winter months. We therefore sought to re-evaluate CAP aetiology by systematically applying multiplex PCR in a representative cohort of mostly elderly patients hospitalised in Melbourne during non-winter months and compare diagnostic result..
View full abstractGrants
Funding Acknowledgements
The study was supported by a grant from the HCF research foundation. The funder had no role in study design or analysis. Harin Karunajeewa is supported by an Australian National Health Medical Research Career Development Fellowship. Melanie Lloyd is supported by an Australian Research Training Scheme Scholarship.