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Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) Infection

BASICS

  • Definition: Medium-sized, membrane-bound, single-stranded, negative-sense RNA virus causing acute respiratory tract illness in all age groups.
  • Adults: URTI, may progress to pneumonia, asthma/COPD exacerbation.
  • Infants/Children: LRTI (bronchiolitis), rarely pneumonia/respiratory failure/death.
  • Pediatric: 90–95% infected by 24 months; leading cause of pediatric bronchiolitis.

EPIDEMIOLOGY

  • Seasonality: Outbreaks each winter (Oct–Jan).
  • Morbidity/Mortality: >100,000 annual hospitalizations (US), 2.1 million outpatient visits (children <5 years).
  • Incidence (Worldwide): ~33 million LRTI/year, ~199,000 childhood deaths.
  • Hospitalizations: 3.2 million/year (children <5 years).
  • Post-COVID: Increasing RSV cases.

ETIOLOGY & PATHOPHYSIOLOGY

  • Family: Paramyxoviridae; subtypes A & B (A = more severe).
  • Transmission: Direct contact/droplets; incubation 2–8 days.
  • Immunity: Incomplete; recurrent infections common.
  • Pathology: Neutrophil-predominant airway inflammation; major cause of asthma/COPD exacerbation.
  • Genetics: Severity linked to cytokine gene polymorphisms (CCR5, IL4, IL8, IL10, IL13).

RISK FACTORS

  • Infants: <35 weeks' gestation, low birth weight, male, cardiopulmonary disease, HIV, Down syndrome, no breastfeeding.
  • All ages: Persistent asthma, socioeconomic vulnerability, immunodeficiency, smoke exposure, daycare attendance, air pollutants, multiple births, malnutrition.
  • Others: Older adults with COPD or functional disability.

PREVENTION

  • Hand hygiene (alcohol-based rubs preferred)
  • Avoid passive smoke
  • Isolation of proven/suspected cases
  • Palivizumab: Monoclonal antibody for high-risk infants (preterm ≤28+6wks, <12mo at RSV season, BPD, cardiac/pulmonary disease)
  • Nirsevimab: Long-acting mAb, approved for broader population (single injection before season; advantage over palivizumab)
  • Breastfeeding: Reduces hospitalizations
  • Probiotics: Experimental (promising in animal studies)
  • AAP Prophylaxis Indications: Chronic lung disease, hemodynamically significant CHD, congenital airway/neuromuscular disease (<24mo); preterm <29wk and <1yr at season start
  • Dosage: Up to 5 monthly doses of palivizumab at 15 mg/kg IM

ASSOCIATED CONDITIONS

  • Pulmonary infiltrates/atelectasis, otitis media, hyperinflation, respiratory failure, hyperkalemia, apnea, bacterial pneumonia

DIAGNOSIS

HISTORY

  • Risk: Prematurity, smoke, daycare, siblings, immunization, respiratory disease in family
  • Symptoms (children): Nasal congestion, cough, coryza, low-grade fever, wheeze, nasal flaring, chest retraction
  • Symptoms (adults): URI, mild fever, cough, wheeze

PHYSICAL EXAM

  • Fever, tachypnea, grunting, flaring, retraction, apnea, hypoxia, dehydration, serous/acute otitis
  • URT: Rhinorrhea, congestion, cough, sneezing
  • LRT: Rhonchi, wheezing, crackles, prolonged expiration

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

  • Mild/URTI: Other viruses (parainfluenza, metapneumovirus, influenza, rhinovirus, coronavirus, adenovirus, bocavirus), allergic rhinitis, asthma, croup
  • Severe/LRTI: Bronchiolitis, asthma, pneumonia, foreign body

TESTS

  • Clinical diagnosis; no routine confirmation required.
  • CXR: Hyperinflation, peribronchiolar thickening, atelectasis, infiltrates (if obtained)
  • PCR/Antigen: Used in hospitalized/high-risk patients only
  • Criteria for hospitalization: Apnea, hypoxia, respiratory failure, poor oral intake, dehydration, SpO₂ ≤92%

TREATMENT

GENERAL MEASURES

  • Supportive: Nasal suction, antipyretics, treat dehydration (oral/IV/NG fluids), oxygen (SpO₂ <92%)
  • Monitor for: Feeding, fluid status, respiratory distress

MEDICATION

  • First line: Oxygen (if hypoxic), acetaminophen/ibuprofen for fever/pain, fluids for dehydration.
  • Not recommended: Albuterol/epinephrine, systemic steroids, hypertonic saline, routine antibiotics, chest physiotherapy.
  • Fluids: NG/IV if unable to feed orally.
  • Ribavirin: Only in select immunocompromised/LRTI cases.
  • Suction: May be used but excessive suctioning may prolong hospitalization.

INPATIENT CARE

  • Goals: Maintain fluid balance, normal O₂, escalate to CPAP if worsening
  • Mechanical ventilation: ~5% of hospitalized infants
  • Discharge: No O₂ requirement, stable feeding/hydration, follow-up arranged

FOLLOW-UP/ONGOING CARE

  • Vaccine: Ad26.RSV.preF, RSVpreF (bivalent) for adults ≥60 yrs (CDC: one dose)
  • Maternal vaccination: RSVpreF vaccine during 32–36 wks gestation in RSV season
  • Monitor: Fluid/O₂, feeding status

PATIENT EDUCATION

PROGNOSIS

  • Full recovery in 7–10 days
  • Reinfection is common
  • Early RSV infection linked to increased childhood asthma risk

COMPLICATIONS

  • <1% mortality (<400 deaths/year US)
  • Increased risk of recurrent wheezing, allergic sensitization, reduced pulmonary function, asthma

ICD-10 CODES

  • B97.4 Respiratory syncytial virus causing diseases elsewhere
  • J06.9 Acute upper respiratory infection, unspecified
  • J21.0 Acute bronchiolitis due to RSV

CLINICAL PEARLS

  • RSV causes 50–90% pediatric bronchiolitis.
  • Hand hygiene is key for prevention.
  • Diagnosis is clinical; lab/radiology rarely needed.
  • Most cases are managed with supportive care.
  • Palivizumab/nirsevimab for high-risk infants.
  • RSV vaccination for ≥60 years (adults).