ED Diagnosis and Management of Influenza in Children
Shyam Sivasankar, MD, Emergency Medicine Resident, Stanford University-Kaiser Permanente, Stanford, CA
N. Ewen Wang, MD, Associate Professor, Surgery (Emergency Medicine), Associate Director, Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Stanford University Medical School, Stanford, CA
Peer Reviewer:
Catherine A. Marco, MD, FACEP, Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine, Attending Physician, Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton, Ohio
Executive Summary
- Influenza epidemics are caused by “antigenic drift” or point mutations of the influenza hemagglutinins and neuraminidases over time.
- Antigenic shift has the potential to cause pandemics because a population has no prior exposure or immunity to the new strain of virus and the infection will spread very rapidly through the population.
- Influenza typically presents with an abrupt onset of systemic manifestations — fever, headache, myalgia, and malaise, along with respiratory symptoms including cough, rhinorrhea, and sore throat.
- The neuraminidase inhibitors, oseltamivir and zanavimir, are recommended for treatment for both influenza A and B if symptom onset is within 48 hours.
- Neuraminidase inhibitors should be initiated for high-risk patients regardless of the timeframe for the onset of symptoms, including for prophylaxis.
“If the epidemic continues its mathematical rate of acceleration, civilization could easily disappear from the face of the earth within a few weeks.” — Victor Vaughn, Surgeon General of the Army in reference to the Spanish Flu, October 19181
Clinical Case
A 7-year-old male with no significant past medical history presents to the emergency department (ED) in the middle of December. For the past 36 hours, the patient has had a sore throat and a fever with a maximum temperature of 102.3° F (39.1° C). His vaccines are up to date, but he has not received the current influenza vaccine. A classmate of the patient was recently diagnosed with influenza. Currently, the patient is complaining of mild, non-specific abdominal pain and muscle aches throughout his body. He has no rhinorrhea, difficulty breathing, chest pain, diarrhea, vomiting, or rash. The patient's physical exam is unremarkable. The patient’s mother brought him to the ED because she heard that if caught within the right timeframe, he could be treated with medications.
Scope of Problem
From the Spanish influenza of 1918-1919 to the recent pandemic of H1N1 in 2009-2010, influenza has developed a contradictory public reputation. Although generally viewed as a simple common illness, influenza also generates a fear of epidemics and pandemics. In the United States, on average, influenza infects 5-15% of the population annually. Hospitalizations and deaths occur mainly in high-risk groups such as the elderly (> 65 years of age), the very young, and the chronically ill.2 Influenza results in approximately 40,000 deaths in the United States per year.3 In contrast, during the 1918 pandemic, 20-40% of the world’s population developed the infection. More than 600,000 people died in the United States and 50 million people died worldwide; the majority of those who died were young adults.4 The 2009 pandemic affected 1.6 million people worldwide, with 3433 deaths in the United States. However, 100 years after the Spanish flu pandemic, the effects were mitigated by modern public health efforts and the availability of a vaccine, antibiotics, as well as modern medicine. The estimated case fatality rate was 0.03% compared to 2% in 1918.
Etiology
The influenza virus is categorized into three genera — influenza A, B, and C. Of the influenza genera, influenza A is the most virulent human pathogen. In addition to humans, influenza A infects other mammals and birds. The ability of different strains of influenza A virus to be transmitted from other animals to humans has given rise to eponyms such as the swine flu and the avian flu. If zoonotic influenza A strains mutate so that not only animal-to-human but also human-to-human transmission occurs, influenza A infection can result in virulent pandemics. Influenza B occurs in humans primarily and causes less severe disease than influenza A. Influenza C only infects humans, but it is an uncommon strain and will not be discussed here.
The influenza virus is an RNA virus with two large glycoproteins, hemagglutinin (H) and neuraminidase (N), on its surface. Hemagglutinin mediates viral binding and DNA entry into host cells. Neuraminidase is involved in release of the virus from the host cell. These glycoproteins characterize the subtype of the virus and give them their name (e.g., H1N1). These subtypes are further divided into strains based on other virulence factors. Although there are 16 hemagglutinins and nine neuraminidases known, only H1, H2, and H3, and N1 and N2 are commonly found in humans.5 Antiviral drugs target hemagglutinin and neuraminidase function. Vaccines consist of antibodies to the hemagglutinin and neuraminidase antigens.
Epidemiology
In North America, influenza season typically is defined as the months between November and April. This highly contagious disease is spread as an aerosol and is transmitted from person-to-person through respiratory secretions from coughing, sneezing, and talking, as well as through fomites.6 After gaining access to the respiratory tract, the virus replicates within the epithelium. It is most commonly found in the upper respiratory tract, but may also infect the lower respiratory tract.
The typical incubation period of the virus is between 1-4 days. Infected individuals may shed the virus 24 hours prior to symptom onset and are considered contagious up to 10 days after symptoms start, although most viral shedding occurs within the first 24-48 hours of illness onset.7 Children tend to shed the virus for longer periods than adults, making them major causes of infection in the community.
Epidemics and Pandemics
An epidemic is defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as “the occurrence of more disease than expected in a given area or among a specific group of people over a particular period of time.”8 This predetermined “epidemic threshold” is based on data collected from previous influenza seasons. A pandemic is a worldwide epidemic — one that occurs within several countries, usually involving a new influenza strain and affecting a certain percentage of the population in each country.8
Influenza epidemics are caused by “antigenic drift” or point mutations of the influenza hemagglutinins and neuraminidases over time. These mutations slowly create an increasing variety of influenza strains until a strain is different enough that it can infect some people who were immune to pre-existing influenza strains. The new strain will then infect the population, causing an epidemic (although the strain will still be similar enough to other strains that some members of the population will still be immune).
Antigenic shift occurs when strains from different species combine through independent reassortment to create entirely new antigens or an entirely new strain of influenza. Antigenic shift has the potential to cause pandemics because a population has no prior exposure or immunity to the new strain of virus and the infection will spread very rapidly through the population.
Differential Diagnosis
Although influenza tends to occur during winter months and local public health surveillance reports can heighten suspicion of the diagnosis of influenza, it is difficult to differentiate influenza infection from any of the respiratory viruses clinically. Influenza can infect any part of the respiratory tract and can cause symptoms similar to many of the respiratory viruses. Thus, influenza infection can mimic respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) bronchiolitis as well as laryngotracheitis.
Bacterial infection must always be on the differential of febrile respiratory illness. Febrile neonates and infants should be worked up in a systematic manner to exclude serious bacterial illness. Ill-appearing children and those in respiratory distress should be treated initially with empiric antibiotics appropriate for respiratory bacterial pathogens until the precise etiology is known. Children with documented influenza infection who deteriorate should be considered to have a bacterial superinfection and treated accordingly.
Clinical Course and Complications
In children, the symptoms of influenza are difficult to differentiate from other winter viral illnesses. Influenza typically presents with an abrupt onset of systemic manifestations — fever, headache, myalgia, and malaise, along with respiratory symptoms including cough, rhinorrhea, and sore throat.9 In children, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea are more likely to be seen in comparison to adults with influenza. In a study of children younger than 13 years of age who were diagnosed with the influenza virus, the predominant symptom was fever — found in 95% of the population. Cough (77%), rhinitis (78%), headache (26%), and myalgia (7%) were the most commonly reported symptoms, similar to what is seen in the adult population.10
The symptoms typically last between 2 to 5 days. Improvement in symptoms tends to occur within the first 48 hours. Among children who are generally healthy with no medical comorbidities, influenza tends to be a self-limited condition with no complications.9,11 A post-viral cough may linger, and post-influenza asthenia, manifested by fatigue and weakness, may last for weeks, especially in older children.12
Although the majority of influenza cases are self-limited in healthy children, complications occur, particularly in high-risk patients. Common complications include viral pneumonia, acute otitis media, and bacterial co- or superinfections. Less common are neurologic and cardiac consequences.
The populations with greater probability for severe courses of influenza or those who may have a complicated course include the elderly (> 65 years), pregnant or recently postpartum women, children younger than 5 years of age, and those defined as “high risk.”13 (See Table 1.) In particular, children younger than 2 years of age and children with neurologic disorders, sickle cell disease, immunosuppression, and diabetes are at a high risk for complications from influenza.14
Table 1. Groups at High Risk for Influenza Complications |
Persons with chronic disease including: pulmonary (including asthma), cardiovascular (except hypertension), renal, hepatic, hematologic (including sickle cell disease), metabolic (including diabetes mellitus), neurologic, neuromuscular, and neurodevelopmental disorders (including disorders of the brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerve and muscle such as cerebral palsy, epilepsy, stroke, intellectual disability [mental retardation], moderate-to-severe developmental delay, muscular dystrophy, or spinal cord injury) |
Immunosuppression (including immunosuppression caused by medications for HIV) |
Women who are pregnant or postpartum (within 2 weeks after delivery) |
Children on current long-term aspirin therapy |
Native Americans and Alaskan Natives |
Body mass index > 2.33 kg/m2 standard deviations above the mean |
Residents of chronic care facilities |
Adapted from: Influenza Division, National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, CDC. Prevention and control of seasonal influenza with vaccines. MMWR Recomm Rep 2013; 62:1. |
Children < 2 years of age |
The most common complication of influenza infection is bacterial otitis media.15
As with other viral infections, bacterial co-infections or superinfections may occur. One theory is that a weakened immune system, as well as a denuded respiratory epithelium, provide an easy target for bacterial colonization and entry. Bacterial pneumonia tends to be severe when caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae or Staphylococcus aureus.16
Neurologic complications (aseptic meningitis, cerebellar ataxia, Guillan-Barre syndrome, transverse myelitis, encephalopathy, and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis) are uncommon, with an incidence of 4 per every 100,000 person-years.17 These complications are more prevalent in children with pre-existing neurologic disorders and tend to occur in younger children with an incidence of 4 per 100,000 person-years.17,18
Cardiac complications, including pericarditis and myocarditis, are quite rare.
Pediatric death is usually due to a complication from a superinfection with a bacterial pathogen.19 According to the CDC, there were 109 laboratory confirmed influenza-related deaths during the 2013-14 influenza season. The mean age for death was 6.0 years and the median age was 4.6 years.
Diagnostic and Adjunct Testing
According to the CDC, testing should be undertaken if results will change the clinical care for the patient, affect clinical practice for other patients, or change outbreak-control strategies within the population.20 Admitted patients should be tested for influenza along with a respiratory viral panel for cohorting purposes. In general, treatment should be based on clinical suspicion for influenza rather than laboratory test results. Sometimes, influenza testing can help with decreasing antibiotic use.
Multiple modalities exist for influenza testing, and include PCR testing, immunofluorescence, enzyme immunoassay, viral culture, and serologic testing. (See Table 2.) The gold standard for diagnosis is viral culture, which takes 48-72 hours for results. Immunofluorescence and enzyme immunoassays often are batched in large hospitals and run at multiple intervals during a day. Rapid testing provides results within 30 minutes,21 usually using enzyme immunoassay methods. Rapid testing is less sensitive and specific than gold-standard testing options, but can be useful to the ED physician to guide treatment. Accordingly, ED providers should use both laboratory testing, especially if negative, and clinical gestalt to decide the need for treatment in suspected influenza. As with any illness, if the incidence is low, the false-positive rates tend to be higher and the positive predictive value is decreased.
Table 2. Diagnostic Tests for Detecting the Influenza Virus |
||||
|
Time |
Acceptable Specimen Source |
Sensitivity/ |
When Do I Use This? |
PCR (can differentiate between viral subtypes) |
1-6 hours |
Nasopharyngeal swab or wash, throat swab, nasal or endotracheal aspirate, sputum |
High sensitivity, very high specificity |
Primary care setting, emergency department, hospital setting |
Immunofluorescence |
1-4 hours |
Nasopharyngeal swab or wash, bronchial wash, nasal or endotracheal aspirate |
Moderately high sensitivity, high specificity |
Emergency department, |
Rapid diagnostics (antigen testing) |
< 30 minutes |
Nasopharyngeal swab, throat swab, nasal wash, nasal aspirate |
Low-to-moderate sensitivity, high specificity |
Primary care setting, emergency department, hospital setting |
Adapted from: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Guidance for Clinicians on the Use of Rapid Influenza Diagnostic Tests. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/flu/professionals/diagnosis/clinician_guidance_ridt.htm. Accessed Jan. 25, 2015. |
||||
Viral culture (gold standard) |
3-10 days |
Nasopharyngeal swab or wash, nasal or endotracheal aspirate, sputum, bronchial wash |
Moderately high sensitivity, highest specificity |
Research purposes |
Rapid cell culture |
1-3 days |
Research purposes |
There are no specific adjunct studies recommended for the suspicion of influenza. Rather, ordering of adjunct studies should be guided by history, physical exam, and differential diagnosis. For example, appropriate septic workups should be pursued for those younger than 2 months of age. If the patient appears to be tachypneic, toxic, or has focal findings on a lung exam, a chest X-ray should be obtained. Those with comorbid pulmonary or cardiac conditions should have a more detailed workup due to the increased risk of complications. Routine chemistries and complete blood counts should not be obtained in healthy patients.
ED Management and Treatment
Supportive therapy tends to be the mainstay of therapy in both the ED and primary care setting. This includes treating fevers, myalgia, and headache with antipyretics and dehydration with anti-emetics and rehydration. As a general rule, aspirin therapy should be avoided in children because of the risk of Reye syndrome (Reye syndrome had an all-time high incidence in 1980 [555 cases], which has since declined to less than five cases per year once its association with aspirin was identified and reported in 1982). Over-the-counter decongestants and cough suppressants are not recommended based on FDA reviews regarding safety and efficacy, especially in infants and young children.
Antibiotics should only be used for children with high likelihood for bacterial superinfection, such as those with a lack of improvement of symptoms within 48 hours, worsening symptoms, increasing difficulty of breathing, or continued deterioration of oxygenation status.
Antivirals: The neuraminidase inhibitors, oseltamivir and zanamivir, are recommended for treatment for both influenza A and B if symptom onset is within 48 hours. Neuraminidase inhibitors should be initiated for high-risk patients regardless of the timeframe for the onset of symptoms, including for prophylaxis. According to the CDC, chemoprophylaxis may serve as an adjunct to vaccination in the following populations: prevention in persons at high risk of influenza complications during the first 2 weeks following exposure to an infectious person, prevention for those with severe immune deficiencies or those who may not respond well to vaccination because they are on immunosuppressive medications, prevention for those at high risk who cannot receive the vaccination due to a contraindication, and prevention among residents at long-term care facilities in the midst of an outbreak.22
Oseltamivir is approved for children older than 2 weeks of age and zanamivir is approved for anyone older than 7 years of age.23,24 Dosages for oseltamivir are found in Table 3. Dosing for zanamivir is 10 mg or two inhalations twice daily for anyone older than 7 years of age.25
Table 3. Oseltamivir Dosing Information |
||
Age |
Weight |
Oseltamivir Dosing |
9-12 months |
3.5 mg/kg/dose twice daily for 5 days |
|
≤ 15 kg |
30 mg twice daily for 5 days |
|
> 15-23 kg |
45 mg twice daily for 5 days |
|
> 23-40 kg |
60 mg twice daily for 5 days |
|
> 40 kg |
75 mg twice daily for 5 days |
|
Weight-based dosing is preferred over age based dosing. Adapted from: Lexicomp. Available at: www.gene.com/download/pdf/tamiflu_prescribing.pdf Accessed Jan. 25, 2015. |
||
0-8 months |
3 mg/kg/dose twice daily for 5 days |
In 2014, a meta-analysis found that oseltamivir reduced the risk of symptomatic influenza by a risk difference of 3.1% and zanamivir by a risk difference of 12.0%.12 Oseltamivir reduces illness duration by 1 to 1.5 days. Studies did not show that risk of hospitalization was reduced.
The major side effects of this class of antiviral medications include gastrointestinal symptoms: nausea, vomiting, and rashes with oseltamivir and diarrhea, nausea, headache, and upper respiratory infection symptoms with zanamivir.24 Rare adverse events include neuropsychiatric conditions, severe skin reactions, and death.23
In December 2014, the FDA approved the use of another neuraminidase inhibitor, peramivir (trade name Rapivab). However, its use is currently limited to a single intravenous dose in adults presenting with influenza symptoms for less than 48 hours.
The CDC no longer recommends the use of adamantane drugs (amantadine and rimantadine) given the high resistance patterns shown by current strains.26
Disposition
There is no national standard or set clinical decision rule to help determine which patients with confirmed or suspected influenza merit admission to the hospital. A study published in 2009 looked retrospectively at children admitted to hospitals with confirmed influenza and found that four predictors within broader categories of historical information, radiographic studies, clinical examination and laboratory tests were independently strongly associated with hospitalization.27 These included history of a high-risk medical condition (2 points), respiratory distress on physical exam (1 point), confirmed influenza B virus (2 points), and radiographic evidence of pneumonia (3 points). Each of these was assigned a score, and a total score between 3 and 8 predicted an 86% chance of hospitalization. Given that routine testing for influenza and obtaining radiographic studies are not routine for most patients presenting with influenza, these criteria may not be universally applicable. (See Table 4.)
Table 4. Scoring Guidelines for Factors Associated with Hospitalization in the Setting of Influenza |
|
|
Points Awarded |
Respiratory distress on exam |
1 |
Radiographic evidence of pneumonia |
3 |
Lab confirmed influenza B infection |
2 |
Adapted from: Bender JM, Ampofo K, Gesteland P, et al. Development and validation of a risk score for predicting hospitalization in children with influenza virus infection. Pedatr Emerg Care 2009;25:369-375.. |
|
High-risk medical condition |
2 |
Tufts Medical Center developed guidelines for admission to a pediatric ward unit vs the pediatric ICU based on vital signs and physical examination. These guidelines may represent a starting point for standardizing admission criteria for patients presenting with influenza, based on literature review and site-specific consensus (see Table 5).
Table 5. Guidelines for Admission of Influenza Patients |
|
Admit to Pediatric Ward Unit |
Admit to PICU |
Adapted from: Adapted from Floating Hospital for Children at Tufts Medical Center Pediatric Influenza Clinical Practice Guidelines. |
|
|
|
High-risk patients, especially those with congenital heart defects and chronic pulmonary diseases with influenza-like symptoms (even if they are well appearing), should be managed in conjunction with the consulting specialist. These patients may be admitted under an observation status or discharged home with close specialty follow-up.
For patients with stable vital signs and no other complications (medical, social, etc.), close follow-up with a primary care provider should be stressed and discharge home is appropriate.
Immunizations, Prevention, and Public Health Implications
Infection control and vaccination remain at the forefront of preventive treatment for influenza. Although vaccination is not part of the purview of an ED physician, knowledge of vaccination essentials is fundamental. Beyond the goal of individual protection, the goals of vaccination include herd immunity. Patients with family members who are elderly or chronically ill should be encouraged to obtain an influenza vaccine to protect their loved ones.
The influenza vaccine is created annually according to World Health Organization predictions of the strains likely to be circulating the following year. It consists of three (trivalent) to four (tetravalent) viral strains. According to the CDC, the effectiveness of the 2013-2014 vaccine was 61% (95% confidence interval, 52-68%).28 The strains used in the 2014-15 vaccine are identical to those used in the 2013-2014 season, but have so far only been found to have a 23% success rate according to the CDC.
In the United States, two forms of the vaccine are currently licensed — the inactivated vaccine for intramuscular use and the live-attenuated, cold-adapted vaccine administered intranasally. (See Table 6.) The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends annual influenza vaccination for anyone older than 6 months of age. Vaccines should be administered prior to influenza season, usually in the October and November timeframe, but can be given anytime during influenza season. Children with moderate-to-severe febrile illnesses should not be vaccinated until after recovery.
Table 6. Comparing Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine (LAIV) with Inactivated Influenza Intramuscular Vaccine (IIMV) |
||
LAIV |
IIMV |
|
Approved ages |
2-49 years |
≥ 6 months |
Interval between the two doses administered to children between the ages of 6 months to 8 years |
≥ 4 weeks |
≥ 4 weeks |
Okay to give simultaneously with other vaccines? |
Yes |
Yes |
Okay to give in those with medical risk factors for influenza-related complications*? |
No |
Yes |
Can be given to to children with asthma or in children aged 2-4 years with wheezing in the past year? |
No |
Yes |
Can be given to those in close contact with immunosuppressed persons requiring a protected environment? |
No |
Yes |
* See Table for high-risk population. Adapted from: Grohskopf LA, Olsen SJ, Sokolow LZ, et al. Prevention and control .of seasonal influenza with vaccines: Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) — United States, 2014-15 influenza season. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2014;63:691-697. |
||
Route of administration |
Intranasal |
Intramuscular |
Starting in the 2014-2015 influenza season, the CDC now recommends use of the intranasal vaccine for healthy children ages 2-8 years. According to the CDC, “recent studies suggest that the nasal spray influenza vaccine may work better than the influenza shot in younger children.” It is also emphasized that vaccination should not be delayed if the intranasal formulation is unavailable. The intranasal vaccine should be avoided in children with metabolic diseases, chronic renal disease, neuromuscular disorders, immunosuppression, hemoglobinopathies, cardiac disease, and pregnancy.29,30
ED physicians should also be aware that certain populations are eligible for palivizumab (Synagis) to prevent respiratory tract disease caused by RSV. These include anyone younger than 2 years of age with a history of bronchopulmonary dysplasia, chronic lung disease of prematurity, or hemodynamically significant congenital heart disease, as well as premature infants with a gestational age < 35 weeks.31
Summary Case Conclusion
A rapid influenza test was ordered for this patient, and results were positive for influenza A. Oseltamivir was given since he was within the 48-hour window for its administration.
References
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- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Clinical Signs and Symptoms of Influenza. 2013. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/flu/professionals/acip/clinical.htm. Accessed November 20, 2014.
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- Silvennoinen H, Peltola V, Lehtinen P, et al. Clinical presentation of influenza in unselected children treated as outpatients. Pediatr Infect Dis J 2009;28:372-375.
- Poehling KA, Edwards KM, Weinberg GA, et al. The underrecognized burden of influenza in young children. N Engl J Med 2006;355:31-40.
- Jefferson T, Jones MA, Doshi P, et al. Neuraminidase inhibitors for preventing and treating influenza in healthy adults and children. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2014;4:CD008965.
- Ruf BR, Knuf M. The burden of seasonal and pandemic influenza in infants and children. Eur J Pediatr 2014;173:265-276.
- Gill PJ, Ashdown HF, Wang K, et al. Identification of children at risk of influenza-related complications in primary and ambulatory care: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Lancet Respir Med 2014; pii: S2213-2600(14)70252-8. doi: 10.1016/S2213-2600(14)70252-8. [Epub ahead of print].
- Fraaij PL, Heikkinen T. Seasonal influenza: The burden of disease in children. Vaccine 2011;29:7524-7528.
- Dawood FS, Fiore A, Kamimoto L, et al. Influenza-associated pneumonia in children hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed influenza, 2003-2008. Pediatric Infect Dis J 2010;29:585-590.
- Newland JG, Laurich VM, Rosenquist AW, et al. Neurologic complications in children hospitalized with influenza: Characteristics, incidence, and risk factors. J Pediatr 2007;150:306-310.
- Wilking AN, Elliott E, Garcia MN, et al. Central nervous system manifestations in pediatric patients with influenza A H1N1 infection during the 2009 pandemic. Pediatr Neurol 2014;51:370-376.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. FluView: Influenza Hospitalization Surveillance Network. 2014. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly/Accessed November 20, 2014.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Guidance for Clinicians on the Use of Rapid Influenza Diagnostic Tests. 2014. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/flu/professionals/diagnosis/clinician_guidance_ridt.htm. Accessed November 20, 2014.
- Harper SA, Bradley JS, Englund JA, et al. Seasonal influenza in adults and children—diagnosis, treatment, chemoprophylaxis, and institutional outbreak management: clinical practice guidelines of the Infectious Diseases Society of America. Clin Infect Dis 2009;48:1003-1032.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Influenza Antiviral Medications: Summary for Clinicians. 2015. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/flu/professionals/antivirals/summary-clinicians.htm. Accessed January 26, 2015.
- Chung EH. Vaccine allergies. Clin Exp Vaccine Res 2014;3:50-57.
- Karadag-Oncel E, Ceyhan M. Oseltamivir in neonates, infants and young children: A focus on clinical pharmacology. Infect Disord Drug Targets 2013;13:15-24.
- Relenza (zanamivir) [package insert]. Research Triangle Park. NC: GlaxoSmithKline; 2008.
- Rahman M, Bright RA, Kieke BA, et al. Adamantane-resistant influenza infection during the 2004-05 season. Available at: http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/14/1/pdfs/07-0460.pdf. Accessed Feb. 6, 2015.
- Bender JM, Ampofo K, Gesteland P, et al. Development and validation of a risk score for predicting hospitalization in children with influenza virus infection. Pediatr Emerg Care 2009;25:369-375.
- Flannery B, Thaker SN, Clippard J, et al. Interim estimates of 2013-14 seasonal influenza vaccine effectiveness — United States, February 2014. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2014;63:137-142.
- Committee on infectious Diseases. Recommendations for prevention and control of influenza in children, 2013-2014. Pediatrics 2013;132(4):e1089-1104.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Summary Recommendations: Prevention and Control of Influenza with Vaccines: Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices—(ACIP)—United States, 2013-14. 2013; http://www.cdc.gov/flu/professionals/acip/2013-summary-recommendatiions.htm. Accessed November 20, 2014.
- Prescribing Information for Synagis. 1998.
MONOGRAPH: Influenza hospitalizations and deaths occur mainly in high-risk groups such as the elderly, the chronically ill, and the very young.
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