Gastrointestinal symptoms as a major presentation component of a novel multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) that is related to COVID-19: a single center experience of 44 cases
Autor
Miller, Jonathan
Cantor, Amanda
Zachariah, Philip
Ahn, Danielle
Martinez, Mercedes
Margolis, Kara
Institución
Resumen
Until recently, the clinical course of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in
children has been reported to be largely mild.1,2 Recently, it has become evident that a subset of
children exposed to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) can
become critically ill with a condition now referred to as multisystem inflammatory syndrome in
children (MIS-C), characterized by systemic hyperinflammation with fever and multi-system
organ dysfunction.3
Gastrointestinal symptoms are increasingly recognized to be associated
with the presentation of MIS-C, potentially confusing the diagnosis of MIS-C with other common,
less toxic gastrointestinal infections and even inflammatory bowel disease. In the first published
correspondence describing MIS-C in eight patients from the United Kingdom, 100% presented
with GI symptoms.4
Similarly 6 of 10 patients from an Italian cohort had GI issues.5
This is In
contrast to adults, who most commonly present with respiratory symptoms, and report GI
symptoms in <10-15% of cases.6,7 We examined whether similar presentations and prevalence
extended to our comparatively larger U.S. cohort of 44 patients (<21 years old) with MIS-C.