Primary Epstein-Barr virus infection with and without infectious mononucleosis

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Primary Epstein-Barr virus infection with and without infectious mononucleosis. / Rostgaard, Klaus; Balfour, Henry H.; Jarrett, Ruth; Erikstrup, Christian; Pedersen, Ole; Ullum, Henrik; Nielsen, Lars Peter; Voldstedlund, Marianne; Hjalgrim, Henrik.

In: PLoS ONE, Vol. 14, No. 12, e0226436, 2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rostgaard, K, Balfour, HH, Jarrett, R, Erikstrup, C, Pedersen, O, Ullum, H, Nielsen, LP, Voldstedlund, M & Hjalgrim, H 2019, 'Primary Epstein-Barr virus infection with and without infectious mononucleosis', PLoS ONE, vol. 14, no. 12, e0226436. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226436

APA

Rostgaard, K., Balfour, H. H., Jarrett, R., Erikstrup, C., Pedersen, O., Ullum, H., Nielsen, L. P., Voldstedlund, M., & Hjalgrim, H. (2019). Primary Epstein-Barr virus infection with and without infectious mononucleosis. PLoS ONE, 14(12), [e0226436]. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226436

Vancouver

Rostgaard K, Balfour HH, Jarrett R, Erikstrup C, Pedersen O, Ullum H et al. Primary Epstein-Barr virus infection with and without infectious mononucleosis. PLoS ONE. 2019;14(12). e0226436. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226436

Author

Rostgaard, Klaus ; Balfour, Henry H. ; Jarrett, Ruth ; Erikstrup, Christian ; Pedersen, Ole ; Ullum, Henrik ; Nielsen, Lars Peter ; Voldstedlund, Marianne ; Hjalgrim, Henrik. / Primary Epstein-Barr virus infection with and without infectious mononucleosis. In: PLoS ONE. 2019 ; Vol. 14, No. 12.

Bibtex

@article{3a1ce08e1f1f451389b30e9fb928a4db,
title = "Primary Epstein-Barr virus infection with and without infectious mononucleosis",
abstract = "Background Infectious mononucleosis (IM) is a common adverse presentation of primary infection with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in adolescence and later, but is rarely recognized in early childhood where primary EBV infection commonly occurs. It is not known what triggers IM, and also not why IM risk upon primary EBV infection (IM attack rate) seemingly varies between children and adolescents. IM symptoms may be severe and persist for a long time. IM also markedly elevates the risk of Hodgkin lymphoma and multiple sclerosis for unknown reasons. The way IM occurrence depends on age and sex is incompletely described and hard to interpret etiologically, because it depends on three quantities that are not readily observable: the prevalence of EBV-nave persons, the hazard rate of seroconverting and the attack rate, i.e. the fraction of primary EBV infections that is accompanied by IM. We therefore aimed to provide these quantities indirectly, to obtain epidemiologically interpretable measures of the dynamics of IM occurrence to provide etiological clues. Methods and findings We used joint modeling of EBV prevalence and IM occurrence data to provide detailed sex- and age-specific EBV infection rates and IM attack rates and derivatives thereof for a target population of all Danes age 0–29 years in 2006–2011. We demonstrate for the first time that IM attack rates increase dramatically rather precisely in conjunction to typical ages of puberty onset. The shape of the seroconversion hazard rate for children and teenagers confirmed a priori expectations and underlined the importance of what happens at age 0–2 years. The cumulative risk of IM before age 30 years was 13.3% for males and 22.4% for females. IM is likely to become more common through delaying EBV infection in years to come. Conclusions The change in attack rate at typical ages of puberty onset suggests that the immunologic response to EBV drastically changes over a relatively short age-span. We speculate that these changes are an integrated part of normal sexual maturation. Our findings may inform further etiologic research into EBV-related diseases and vaccine design. Our methodology is applicable to the epidemiological study of any infectious agent that establishes a persistent infection in the host and the sequelae thereof.",
author = "Klaus Rostgaard and Balfour, {Henry H.} and Ruth Jarrett and Christian Erikstrup and Ole Pedersen and Henrik Ullum and Nielsen, {Lars Peter} and Marianne Voldstedlund and Henrik Hjalgrim",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0226436",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Primary Epstein-Barr virus infection with and without infectious mononucleosis

AU - Rostgaard, Klaus

AU - Balfour, Henry H.

AU - Jarrett, Ruth

AU - Erikstrup, Christian

AU - Pedersen, Ole

AU - Ullum, Henrik

AU - Nielsen, Lars Peter

AU - Voldstedlund, Marianne

AU - Hjalgrim, Henrik

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Background Infectious mononucleosis (IM) is a common adverse presentation of primary infection with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in adolescence and later, but is rarely recognized in early childhood where primary EBV infection commonly occurs. It is not known what triggers IM, and also not why IM risk upon primary EBV infection (IM attack rate) seemingly varies between children and adolescents. IM symptoms may be severe and persist for a long time. IM also markedly elevates the risk of Hodgkin lymphoma and multiple sclerosis for unknown reasons. The way IM occurrence depends on age and sex is incompletely described and hard to interpret etiologically, because it depends on three quantities that are not readily observable: the prevalence of EBV-nave persons, the hazard rate of seroconverting and the attack rate, i.e. the fraction of primary EBV infections that is accompanied by IM. We therefore aimed to provide these quantities indirectly, to obtain epidemiologically interpretable measures of the dynamics of IM occurrence to provide etiological clues. Methods and findings We used joint modeling of EBV prevalence and IM occurrence data to provide detailed sex- and age-specific EBV infection rates and IM attack rates and derivatives thereof for a target population of all Danes age 0–29 years in 2006–2011. We demonstrate for the first time that IM attack rates increase dramatically rather precisely in conjunction to typical ages of puberty onset. The shape of the seroconversion hazard rate for children and teenagers confirmed a priori expectations and underlined the importance of what happens at age 0–2 years. The cumulative risk of IM before age 30 years was 13.3% for males and 22.4% for females. IM is likely to become more common through delaying EBV infection in years to come. Conclusions The change in attack rate at typical ages of puberty onset suggests that the immunologic response to EBV drastically changes over a relatively short age-span. We speculate that these changes are an integrated part of normal sexual maturation. Our findings may inform further etiologic research into EBV-related diseases and vaccine design. Our methodology is applicable to the epidemiological study of any infectious agent that establishes a persistent infection in the host and the sequelae thereof.

AB - Background Infectious mononucleosis (IM) is a common adverse presentation of primary infection with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) in adolescence and later, but is rarely recognized in early childhood where primary EBV infection commonly occurs. It is not known what triggers IM, and also not why IM risk upon primary EBV infection (IM attack rate) seemingly varies between children and adolescents. IM symptoms may be severe and persist for a long time. IM also markedly elevates the risk of Hodgkin lymphoma and multiple sclerosis for unknown reasons. The way IM occurrence depends on age and sex is incompletely described and hard to interpret etiologically, because it depends on three quantities that are not readily observable: the prevalence of EBV-nave persons, the hazard rate of seroconverting and the attack rate, i.e. the fraction of primary EBV infections that is accompanied by IM. We therefore aimed to provide these quantities indirectly, to obtain epidemiologically interpretable measures of the dynamics of IM occurrence to provide etiological clues. Methods and findings We used joint modeling of EBV prevalence and IM occurrence data to provide detailed sex- and age-specific EBV infection rates and IM attack rates and derivatives thereof for a target population of all Danes age 0–29 years in 2006–2011. We demonstrate for the first time that IM attack rates increase dramatically rather precisely in conjunction to typical ages of puberty onset. The shape of the seroconversion hazard rate for children and teenagers confirmed a priori expectations and underlined the importance of what happens at age 0–2 years. The cumulative risk of IM before age 30 years was 13.3% for males and 22.4% for females. IM is likely to become more common through delaying EBV infection in years to come. Conclusions The change in attack rate at typical ages of puberty onset suggests that the immunologic response to EBV drastically changes over a relatively short age-span. We speculate that these changes are an integrated part of normal sexual maturation. Our findings may inform further etiologic research into EBV-related diseases and vaccine design. Our methodology is applicable to the epidemiological study of any infectious agent that establishes a persistent infection in the host and the sequelae thereof.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0226436

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0226436

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31846480

AN - SCOPUS:85076692998

VL - 14

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 12

M1 - e0226436

ER -

ID: 240750878