Usefulness of clinical definitions of influenza for public health surveillance purposes

Author

Domínguez García, Àngela

Soldevila, Núria

Torner, Núria

Martínez, Ana

Godoy i García, Pere

Rius, Cristina

Jané, Mireia

Publication date

2020-12-14T14:44:44Z

2020-12-14T14:44:44Z

2020



Abstract

This study investigated the performance of various case definitions and influenza symptoms in a primary healthcare sentinel surveillance system. A retrospective study of the clinical and epidemiological characteristics of the cases reported by a primary healthcare sentinel surveillance network for eleven years in Catalonia was conducted. Crude and adjusted diagnostic odds ratios (aDORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of the case definitions and symptoms for all weeks and epidemic weeks were estimated. The most predictive case definition for laboratory-confirmed influenza was the World Health Organization (WHO) case definition for ILI in all weeks (aDOR 2.69; 95% CI 2.42-2.99) and epidemic weeks (aDOR 2.20; 95% CI 1.90-2.54). The symptoms that were significant positive predictors for confirmed influenza were fever, cough, myalgia, headache, malaise, and sudden onset. Fever had the highest aDOR in all weeks (4.03; 95% CI 3.38-4.80) and epidemic weeks (2.78; 95% CI 2.21-3.50). All of the case definitions assessed performed better in patients with comorbidities than in those without. The performance of symptoms varied by age groups, with fever being of high value in older people, and cough being of high value in children. In patients with comorbidities, the performance of fever was the highest (aDOR 5.45; 95% CI 3.43-8.66). No differences in the performance of the case definition or symptoms in influenza cases according to virus type were found.


This study was supported by the Program of Prevention, Surveillance, and Control of Transmissible Diseases (PREVICET); CIBER de Epidemiologia y Salud Publica (CIBERESP); Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid; and the Catalan Agency for the Management of Grants for University Research (AGAUR Grant Number 2017/SGR 1342). The funders had no role in the study design, data collection, and analysis; the decision to publish; or preparation of the manuscript.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Infecció; Epidèmies; Atenció primària

Publisher

MDPI

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.3390/v12010095

Viruses, 2020, vol. 12, num. 1, p. 1-13

Rights

cc-by (c) Domínguez et al., 2020

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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