Determinants of Severity in Pediatric Viral Lower Respiratory Tract Diseases From Emergency Department Presentation to Hospital Course
Valentina Ferro, Chiara Cozzolino, Carla Olita, Flavia Severini, Paola Silvestri, Giulia Nocentini, Margherita Velardi, Anna Chiara Vittucci, Marco Bianchi, Venere Cortazzo, Velia Chiara Di Maio, Anna Maria Musolino, Sebastian Cristaldi, Carlo Federico Perno, Alberto Villani, Mara PisaniBackground:
Predicting severity in pediatric lower respiratory tract diseases (LRTDs) remains challenging, and the role of viral coinfection is debated. We hypothesized that determinants of severity differ between emergency department (ED) presentation and in-hospital course, with viral coinfection acting as a virus-specific effect modifier rather than a uniform risk factor.
Methods:
This was a retrospective cohort of 1242 children <6 years hospitalized for viral LRTDs during 2022–2023 and 2023–2024. Severity at ED presentation was defined as a Pediatric Respiratory Severity Score (PRESS ≥4), and in-hospital deterioration as a Clinical Severity Score (CSS >3). Multivariable logistic regression assessed independent predictors, including virus × coinfection interactions.
Results:
Severe ED presentation occurred in 12.0% (n = 150), and severe hospitalization in 6.6% (n = 82). Infants 0–6 months accounted for 76.8% of severe hospitalizations (
Conclusions:
Severity determinants in pediatric viral LRTDs are dynamic and stage-specific. Viral coinfection acts as a context-dependent effect modifier rather than a uniform predictor. Recognizing these patterns enables precise, time-sensitive risk stratification.