Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci 2021; 25 (2): 1146-1157
DOI: 10.26355/eurrev_202101_24685

Epidemiological features of coronavirus disease 2019 in children: a meta-analysis

J.-G. Wang, Z.-J. Zhong, Y.-F. Mo, L.-C. Wang, R. Chen

Maternal and Child Health Hospital of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, Nanning, China. 354713144@qq.com


OBJECTIVE: Many studies have been published recently on the characteristics of the clinical manifestations of COVID-19 in children. The quality scores of literature are different, and the incidence of clinical manifestations and laboratory tests results vary greatly. Therefore, a systematic retrospective meta-analysis is needed to determine the incidence of the clinical manifestations of COVID-19 in children.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data from databases, such as PubMed, Web of science, EMBASE, Johns Hopkins University, and Chinese databases were analysed from January 31, 2020 to October 20, 2020. High-quality articles were selected for analysis based on a quality standard score. A meta-analysis of random effects was used to determine the prevalence of comorbidities and subgroup meta-analysis to examine the changes in the estimated prevalence in different subgroups.

RESULTS: Seventy-one articles involving 11,671 children were included in the study. The incidence of fever, respiratory symptoms, gastrointestinal symptoms, asymptomatic patients, nervous system symptoms, and chest tightness was 55.8%, 56.8%, 14.4%, 21.1%, 6.7%, and 6.1%, respectively. The incidence of multisystem inflammatory syndrome was 6.2%. Laboratory examination results showed that lymphocytes decreased in 12% and leukocytes decreased in 8.8% of patients, whereas white blood cells increased in 7.8% of patients. Imaging showed abnormalities in 66.5%, and ground-glass opacities were observed in 36.9% patients. Epidemiological history was present in 85.2% cases; severe disease rate was 3.33%. The mortality rate was 0.28%.

CONCLUSIONS: The clinical symptoms of COVID-19 in children are mild, and laboratory indicators and imaging manifestations are atypical. While screening children for COVID-19, in addition to assessing patients for symptoms as the first step of screening, the epidemiological history of patients should be obtained.

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To cite this article

J.-G. Wang, Z.-J. Zhong, Y.-F. Mo, L.-C. Wang, R. Chen
Epidemiological features of coronavirus disease 2019 in children: a meta-analysis

Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci
Year: 2021
Vol. 25 - N. 2
Pages: 1146-1157
DOI: 10.26355/eurrev_202101_24685