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BACKGROUND: An outbreak of acute severe hepatitis of unknown aetiology (AS-Hep-UA) in children during 2022 was subsequently linked to infections with adenovirus-associated virus 2 and other 'helper viruses', including human adenovirus. It is possible that evidence of such an outbreak could be identified at a population level based on routine data captured by electronic health records (EHR). METHODS: We used anonymised EHR to collate retrospective data for all emergency presentations to Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in the UK, between 2016-2022, for all ages from 18 months and older. We investigated clinical characteristics and temporal distribution of presentations of acute hepatitis and of adenovirus infections based on laboratory data and clinical coding. We relaxed the stringent case definition adopted during the AS-Hep-UA to identify all cases of acute hepatitis with unknown aetiology (termed AHUA). We compared events within the outbreak period (defined as 1st Oct 2021-31 Aug 2022) to the rest of our study period. RESULTS: Over the study period, there were 903,433 acute presentations overall, of which 391 (0.04%) were classified as AHUA. AHUA episodes had significantly higher critical care admission rates (p 

Original publication

DOI

10.1186/s12889-024-19292-1

Type

Journal article

Journal

BMC Public Health

Publication Date

15/07/2024

Volume

24

Keywords

AAV, Acute hepatitis, Adenovirus, Electronic health records, Epidemiology, Outbreak, Surveillance, Humans, Electronic Health Records, Retrospective Studies, Male, Adult, Female, Adolescent, Disease Outbreaks, Young Adult, Middle Aged, Acute Disease, Child, Aged, England, Infant, Child, Preschool, United Kingdom