Annemarie M. Van Rossum (Netherlands)

Erasmus MC (University Medical Center Rotterdam) Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases and Immunology
Annemarie van Rossum is paediatrician, professor of Paediatric Infectious Diseases, chair of the Department of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases of the Erasmus MC University Medical Centre in Rotterdam, The Netherlands, and vice chair of the Department of Paediatrics, at the Sophia Children’s Hospital of Erasmus MC. She received her PhD (cum laude) on HIV infection in children in 2002 at the Erasmus University Rotterdam, and did a research fellowship at the department of Microbiology of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA on pneumonoccal colonization before she was trained in Paediatric Infectious Diseases and Immunology in Rotterdam. Her two current research lines focus on respiratory (specifically M. pneumoniae infections) and neonatal infections and aim to develop innovative diagnostics to guide treatment and prevent antibiotic resistance through targeted treatment. She is co-founder of Training Upcoming Leaders in Paediatric Science (www.tulipsforchildhealth.nl). She is examination assessor for the University of Oxford postgraduate MSc program Paediatric Infectious Diseases, and member of the organising committee of the ESPID-Oxford course Hot topics in infection and Immunity in children. She was co-chair of ESPID 2020, and since 2021 she is board member of ESPID and member of the committee for scientific affairs and awards.

Author Of 3 Presentations

Expert

Date
Fri, 13.05.2022
Session Time
07:30 - 08:20
Session Type
Meet The Experts
Room
DIMITRIS MITROPOULOS HALL
Lecture Time
07:30 - 07:30

Introduction

Date
Fri, 13.05.2022
Session Time
11:40 - 13:10
Session Type
Special Session
Room
ALEXANDRA TRIANTI HALL
Lecture Time
11:40 - 11:45

HIGH PREVALENCE OF MYCOPLASMA PNEUMONIAE CARRIAGE IN CHILDREN WITH RECURRENT RESPIRATORY TRACT INFECTIONS IS ASSOCIATED WITH AN ENRICHMENT OF H.INFLUENZAE

Date
Wed, 11.05.2022
Session Time
15:40 - 17:10
Session Type
Parallel Symposium
Room
BANQUETING HALL
Lecture Time
16:37 - 16:47

Abstract

Backgrounds:

Recurrent respiratory tract infections (rRTI) affect up to 10% of young children and cause considerable morbidity. Mycoplasma pneumoniae is a common bacterial cause of lower respiratory tract infection in children and often preceded by asymptomatic upper respiratory tract carriage. We hypothesize that M. pneumoniae carriage is impacted by the local respiratory microbiota and therefore studied this relationship in the context of the mucosal immune system.

Methods

From March 2016 till December 2019 children <7 years with rRTI were included in a prospective cohort study (DIMER study). We studied nasopharyngeal microbiota using 16S-rRNA-sequencing and performed qPCR to detect M. pneumoniae carriage. Furthermore, we analyzed M. pneumoniae-specific and total IgA levels in nasopharyngeal swabs.

Results:

We included 117 children suffering from rRTI of whom 53% had an antibody deficiency: IgA deficiency (25%), IgG subclass deficiency (15%) or a combination of both (14%). In this pediatric cohort we observed a very high carriage of M. pneumonia of 68% carried in the upper respiratory tract. Mucosal M. pneumoniae-specific and total IgA levels were similar between M. pneumoniae carriers and non-carriers. However, we observed that M. pneumoniae carriers had lower microbiota alpha diversity when compared to non-carriers (median Shannon index 1.1 [IQR 0.8-1.4] vs. 1.4 [IQR 1.0-1.7], p=0.003. In multivariable logistic regression analysis corrected for multiple confounders (age, RTI symptoms during sampling, antibiotic prophylactic treatment), a strong association was found between Haemophilus influenza/haemolyticus and M. pneumoniae carriage (OR 23.33 [1.63-751.43], p=0.04, Figure 1).figure abstract espid mp 2022.png

Conclusions/Learning Points:

M. pneumoniae carriage was highly prevalent in children with rRTI. M. pneumoniae carriers had an altered nasopharyngeal microbiota, characterized by an enrichment of H. influenzae/haemolyticus.

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Presenter of 2 Presentations

Introduction

Date
Fri, 13.05.2022
Session Time
11:40 - 13:10
Session Type
Special Session
Room
ALEXANDRA TRIANTI HALL
Lecture Time
11:40 - 11:45

Expert

Date
Fri, 13.05.2022
Session Time
07:30 - 08:20
Session Type
Meet The Experts
Room
DIMITRIS MITROPOULOS HALL
Lecture Time
07:30 - 07:30

Moderator of 1 Session

Session Type
Special Session
Date
Fri, 13.05.2022
Session Time
11:40 - 13:10
Room
ALEXANDRA TRIANTI HALL

Poster Author Of 1 e-Poster

AS01.a. Novel antimicrobial treatments

PD097 - ANTIMICROBIAL ACTIVITIES OF GALACTO- AND FRUCTO-OLIGOSACCHARIDES AGAINST MYCOPLASMA PNEUMONIAE AND STREPTOCOCCUS PNEUMONIAE (ID 1499)

Session Name
0330 - Poster Discussion Session 05: Antimicrobials & Antibiotic Stewardship (ID 6)
My link to connect
https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ODA4Y2YyOTEtODMwNC00MjZmLWI3YmQtMGQ5NmViYWUzMGU3%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22526638ba-6af3-4b0f-a532-a1a511f4ac80%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%22c1a304c9-2550-42da-a117-b3d586e03930%22%7d
Availability (Date and Time)
16 May 2022 17:00-18:00