Interpretation of indoor air surveillance for respiratory infections: a prospective longitudinal observational study in a childcare setting.

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Tác giả: Emmanuel André, Kurt Beuselinck, Caspar Geenen, Sarah Gorissen, Michiel Happaerts, Els Keyaerts, Lies Laenen, Sien Ombelet, Joren Raymenants, Jens Swinnen, Steven Traets

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 305.568 +Alienated and excluded classes

Thông tin xuất bản: Netherlands : EBioMedicine , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 61538

 BACKGROUND: Sampling the air in indoor congregate settings, where respiratory pathogens are ubiquitous, may constitute a valuable yet underutilised data source for community-wide surveillance of respiratory infections. However, there is a lack of research comparing air sampling and individual sampling of attendees. Therefore, it remains unclear how air sampling results should be interpreted for the purpose of surveillance. METHODS: In this prospective observational study, we compared the presence and concentration of several respiratory pathogens in the air with the number of attendees with infections and the pathogen load in their nasal mucus. Weekly for 22 consecutive weeks, we sampled the air in a single childcare setting in Belgium. Concurrently, we collected the paper tissues used to wipe the noses of 23 regular attendees: children aged zero to three and childcare workers. All samples were tested for 29 respiratory pathogens using PCR. FINDINGS: Air sampling sensitively detected most respiratory pathogens found in nasal mucus. Some pathogens (SARS-CoV-2, Pneumocystis jirovecii) were found repeatedly in the air, but rarely in nasal mucus, whilst the opposite was true for others (Human coronavirus NL63). All three pathogens with a clear outbreak pattern (Human coronavirus HKU-1, human parainfluenza virus 3 and 4) were found in the air one week before or concurrent with the first detection in paper tissue samples. The presence and concentration of pathogens in the air was best predicted by the pathogen load of the most infectious case. However, air pathogen concentrations also correlated with the number of attendees with infections. Detection and concentration in the air were associated with CO INTERPRETATION: Our results suggest that air sampling could provide sensitive, responsive epidemiological indicators for the surveillance of respiratory pathogens. Using air CO FUNDING: KU Leuven
  DURABLE project, under the EU4Health Programme of the European Commission
  Thermo Fisher Scientific.
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