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MIS-C has been more common and more severe than previously reported, study finds



CNN
 — 

Although still rare, MIS-C after Covid-19 has been more common and more severe than previously reported, and there are significant racial disparities in cases, according to a study published Thursday in JAMA Network Open.

Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children – which primarily emerges after a Covid-19 infection – causes inflammation in various parts of the body and can affect major organs including the kidneys, brain, lungs and heart. It can be serious, or deadly.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention currently has relied on voluntary case reporting from local health departments for MIS-C surveillance. Through November, they’ve logged a total of about 9,000 cases and 74 deaths from MIS-C out of the millions of Covid-19 cases among children.

A formal diagnosis code was established for MIS-C in 2021, and the new research analyzed records collected by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality from thousands of hospitals representing more than three-quarters of the US population.

It found that for every 100 children hospitalized with Covid-19 in 2021, there were about 17 MIS-C hospitalizations. MIS-C hospitalizations were typically younger and more likely to occur in male children than were Covid-19 hospitalizations.

The more organs affected, the worse outcomes were. As the number of organ systems affected increased from two to six or more, mortality increased from 1% to 6%, according to the new research. The length of stay in the hospital doubled from four to eight days and adverse medication events more than tripled from 5% to 18%.

Overall, more than 60% of children hospitalized with MIS-C had more than two organ systems affected. Of them, about 8% of patients had at least six organ systems affected.

Racial disparities in Covid-19 outcomes are well-established, and this new research found even starker differences in MIS-C outcomes.

MIS-C hospitalizations were twice as likely among Black children as they were among White children. And while Black children represented about 24% of all MIS-C cases, they represented 32% of the most severe cases that affected at least six organ systems.

The researchers also found that the “severity of MIS-C for Black children was likely exacerbated by socioeconomic factors,” with those living in the most socially vulnerable communities typically spending an extra day in the hospital. They did not find the same connection in regards to Covid-19 hospitalizations.

These findings “increase our knowledge of MIS-C and COVID-19 disparities and outcomes, shedding light on the risks and impacts of increasing organ system dysfunction,” according to a commentary on the study from pediatricians and researchers from the University of Colorado School of Medicine.

But they raise even more critical questions, including specific reasons for the vast racial disparities.

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As Omicron cases fall, doctors anxiously await possible surge of dangerous child complication MIS-C

MIS-C can follow Covid-19 even some weeks after infection. It can cause parts of the body to become inflamed, and it can affect major organs including the kidneys, brain, lungs and heart.

With the Omicron variant causing so many illnesses, it wasn’t clear exactly how many MIS-C cases hospitals could expect or how serious they would be. Research is still underway, but health care providers at many major children’s hospitals describe the outcomes as “a mixed bag.”

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tracks MIS-C cases but updates the numbers on its website only once a month. There have been 6,851 cases reported during the pandemic, with 59 deaths, as of January 31.
That’s a tiny fraction of child Covid cases. More than 12.3 million children have been sick with Covid since the start of the pandemic, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics’ analysis of data from the states that report cases, hospitalizations and deaths by age.
The more contagious Omicron variant brought a flood of cases: Almost 4.5 million children have had Covid just since the beginning of January.

Different regions of the country are still at different points in the Omicron wave, and it will take some time before scientists have a clearer picture of what the variant has meant for MIS-C cases overall.

Most MIS-C cases have not been fatal, but just last week, the Wisconsin Department of Health Services reported that a 10-year-old from the southeast part of the state died within the past month from MIS-C.

Tom Haupt, a respiratory disease epidemiologist with the department, said Friday that the state puts a priority on having doctors report even suspected cases of MIS-C so state officials can then report them to the CDC as quickly as possible.

“We want to share this information with the CDC with hopes that we can ultimately find out what’s causing this and what we could do to further prevent MIS-C,” Haupt said.

There are several MIS-C studies underway across the country. Scientists are still trying to figure out why some kids get it and others don’t. They’re also trying to understand the long-term consequences and the best way to treat it.

One thing is certain about MIS-C: “It always follows the same pattern,” said Dr. Roberta DeBiasi, Infectious Disease Division chief at Children’s National Hospital in Washington, DC. “It’s always two to six weeks after we see the spike from whatever variant it is, and then we’re on the lookout for MIS-C. And then, sure enough, it comes.”

DeBiasi is one of several scientists still enrolling participants in MIS-C studies. From her work with kids and Covid-19 so far, MIS-C still seems rare, relative to the number of Covid-19 cases that doctors at Children’s National have treated.
A study published Monday found that during the winter of 2020-21, there was one MIS-C hospitalization for every Covid-19 hospitalization for children 5 to 11 years old. The period studied was long before the Omicron wave hit, but the researchers note “that MIS-C may not be as rare … as previously thought.”

In Washington, DeBiasi said, her hospital has had 30 Omicron-related MIS-C cases. But each wave has brought with it fewer cases. With the first wave, DeBiasi said, they treated about 100 kids with MIS-C, and with Delta, it was about 60.

It’s unclear exactly why there have been fewer cases, but she theorizes that vaccines — now authorized for children 5 and older — may have helped.

“The older kids are much less represented among the MIS-C cases now, and that makes sense because they’re vaccinated, and there are plenty of studies now showing that vaccination reduces the risk of MIS-C cases just like it reduces the risk of hospitalization and severe disease,” she said.

For example, CDC research released in January showed that the Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine reduced the likelihood of MIS-C by 91% in children 12 to 18 years old during a period when the Delta variant was predominant.

At Children’s Hospital of Colorado, workers are seeing about two or three cases of MIS-C a week, despite what Dr. Pei-Ni Jone described as “a ton” of Covid-19 cases. She said some of the MIS-C patients have been vaccinated, but the vast majority are not.

“The MIS-C children, we thought we may see an uptick with Omicron, but we haven’t. It’s very similar for us with the Delta surge,” the cardiology specialist said. “It’s really unknown what’s driving the MIS-C cases.”

At the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Dr. Marian Michaels watched the many-fold increase in Covid infections and hospitalizations in her area with deep concern, but the spike in MIS-C cases hasn’t come. “Luckily, in our area we are not seeing a surge,” she said. “I’m very grateful.”

Michaels said she regularly talks with other doctors as a part of a CDC surveillance network, and with Omicron, it’s been “a mixed bag.” Some hospitals have seen a spike in MIS-C cases, but many have seen only a handful.

At Children’s Hospital in Los Angeles, they too are watching patient numbers closely, but so far, so good.

“Children’s Hospital Los Angeles has yet to see a large spike in MIS-C cases following the surge of Omicron cases in the community,” pediatric cardiologist Dr. Jacqueline Szmuszkovicz of the Heart Institute at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles wrote in an email to CNN.

In December and January, the hospital treated 22 MIS-C patients. In February, it’s been three, with two hospitalized.

“Because we know MIS-C may begin weeks after a child is infected with SARS-CoV-2, we are continuing to be vigilant and waiting to see what the next few weeks bring,” Szmuszkovicz said.

At Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, Dr. Ami Patel, a pediatric infectious disease physician, said workers have seen a steady uptick in MIS-C cases since the end of December. But this is “still relatively lower numbers overall compared to the winter 2020 surge,” she said. During the Delta surge, the hospital saw “relatively few” MIS-C cases.

But there has been a spike at Seattle Children’s. “Approximately 15% of the total MIS-C cases we’ve seen since March 2020 have occurred since mid-December 2021, when Omicron emerged as the main variant. These numbers suggest that MIS-C is increasing with Omicron,” Dr. Michael Portman, director of research in the Division of Cardiology, wrote in an email to CNN.

Texas Children’s in Houston saw the peak in Omicron cases January 7, a little later than in other regions, so workers there still don’t know what MIS-C case load to expect.

There haven’t been any “dramatic increases” — at least, not yet, according to Dr. Jim Versalovic, pathologist-in-chief at the hospital.

Health care providers there have treated more than 280 MIS-C cases since the pandemic began, with two-thirds serious enough that they’ve needed critical care.

The biggest number of MIS-C cases happened between mid-September and mid-October, with the Delta variant. “We’re not quite at that level yet,” Versalovic said. Instead, they’re seeing about one case per day every two to three days.

At UH Rainbow Babies and Children’s Hospital in Cleveland, MIS-C cases seemed to follow much quicker after the spike in Omicron infections than with previous Covid-19 waves. That may not have been unique to the Omicron variant, though, said Dr. Claudia Hoyen, a pediatric infectious disease specialist there.

“I think the reason that it seems so bad was that we were in the Delta surge when Omicron came,” she said.

At Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Dr. Patty Manning said, workers have seen two or three cases of MIS-C a week during Omicron — “possibly less than what we would expect, given the spike of Covid cases in general that we saw.”

She said that could be due to the success of vaccinations, or it could be something specific about Omicron causing fewer MIS-C cases. “It’s unclear at this moment. But we’re never wanting to get comfortable,” Manning said. “Parents still need to be vigilant.”

What to watch for with MIS-C

Pediatricians say that if kids have Covid-19, parents should watch for MIS-C symptoms, typically four to six weeks after the infection. They may look like a return of Covid symptoms or totally different. If the symptoms get worse, they need treatment.

“Children have died in the United States because they didn’t get to emergency rooms fast enough,” Versalovic said.

Doctors said they have learned a lot about how to treat MIS-C. At Jone’s hospital in Colorado, many of the children with MIS-C have not needed to be hospitalized for quite as long as kids were at the beginning of the pandemic.

Doctors are much better at recognizing MIS-C, said UPMC’s Michaels. “Treatment right up front has just been critical.”

That treatment usually includes care that focuses on relieving symptoms and preventing complications, including IV fluids and antibiotics to reduce fever, to keep blood pressure up and to get rid of any possible bacterial infections.
Because MIS-C can throw a child’s immune system into hyperdrive, doctors may also give the child medicine that would suppress their immune system. Those drugs could include steroids or intravenous immunoglobulin, a treatment for people who have antibody deficiencies.

Some children may also need breathing or cardiac support like ventilation or ECMO treatments.

“The long-term follow-up will also be essential to understand how kids do long-term and to understand, from an immune system perspective, what’s going on,” said Michaels, who is involved in several MIS-C studies. “It will also be important to understand from an immune system standpoint, the ones that still are having an effect long-term. Why is that in that case versus another child who was perfectly healthy before the virus? Why would they not have such a good outcome?”

Most children seem to recover well

Jone said that at Colorado Children’s, most children get better and do not seem to have lingering effects.

“The first MIS-C children we saw were in May of 2020. So they already had their one follow-up, and all of those kids in 2020 have done very, very well,” Jone said.

A study in American Heart Association’s journal in January suggested most children with MIS-C begin recovering in the first week after hospital discharge and fully recover heart function within three months.

The best approach with MIS-C, doctors said, is for children not to catch Covid-19 in the first place.

“It’s a very scary, serious condition,” Manning said. “We want to avoid and prevent it at all costs.”

That means getting all kids vaccinated if they’re eligible. Children are still the least-vaccinated of any eligible age group.

There’s no vaccine authorized for children under 5, but parents can protect them by making sure every adult around them is fully vaccinated.

“We do need to vaccinate. There is no infection in the world that has ever gone away just because of having herd immunity from natural disease. Measles didn’t go away from herd immunity,” Michaels said. “Protecting yourself and your loved ones by being immunized is really critical.”

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Wisconsin reports first death of child due to MIS-C, rare syndrome linked to COVID-19

MILWAUKEE — A Wisconsin child has died of a rare condition linked to COVID-19.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported Friday the child is the first in the state to die of Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome.

State health officials said the child died sometime within the last month.

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The child was under 10 years old and was from southeastern Wisconsin. Health officials declined to provide any further identifying details.

Tom Haupt, a state respiratory disease epidemiologist, says the child was one of 183 Wisconsin children who have contracted the disease.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had recorded 6,851 cases as of Jan. 31.

The syndrome appears two to six weeks after a child has been exposed to COVID-19.

Please note: The video at the top of this player is from a previous report

Copyright © 2022 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.



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Wisconsin reports 1st MIS-C death related to COVID-19

Friday, the Wisconsin Department of Health Services (DHS) confirmed the state’s first child death from multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), a rare but serious condition associated with COVID-19.

DHS said the child lived in southeast Wisconsin and was under 10 years of age.

According to the department, 183 MIS-C cases have been reported in Wisconsin since the start of the pandemic. This is the first to result in death.

“We are saddened to report that a child has passed away from MIS-C,” State Health Officer Paula Tran said. “Although COVID-19 cases are declining throughout the state, we are still seeing very high levels of disease transmission in all 72 counties. As COVID-19 continues to cause illness, hospitalizations, and death in our communities, we urge all Wisconsinites to take steps to protect themselves against COVID-19.”

Minnesota has not had any reported MIS-C deaths but lists 157 cases to date. Over two-thirds of those can been in children ages 6 to 19.

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Cases of inflammatory condition, MIS-C, in children spike at pediatric hospital

A significant uptick in MIS-C cases, a rare inflammatory condition that occurs in some children after a COVID infection, has been seen in the past three weeks at a pediatric hospital on Long Island, New York, according to doctors who spoke with Fox News.  

“These are some of the sickest children I’ve seen in my career as a pediatric emergency medicine attending,” Dr. Matthew Harris, M.D., a pediatric emergency medicine physician at Cohen Children’s Medical Center in New Hyde Park, on Long Island, shared with Fox News.  

Child sleeping on a bed.
(Kenishirotie)

“We have had 14 cases in that time. Most have required the ICU. Most were not vaccinated,” Dr. Matt Harris, who is also the Medical Director of the Northwell Health COVID-19 Vaccination Program. 

Harris attributed the spike in MIS-C cases to the surge of positive cases of COVID-19 that occurred in December and January across the nation.   

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Harris, who also serves as the Medical Director at Northwell Health Emergency Preparedness, said these cases are likely the result of the Omicron infection, given the variant’s predominance during that period. The doctor described how the Omicron variant spread like wildfire through the community, affecting mostly unvaccinated or under-vaccinated individuals. Harris also said omicron appeared to be more infectious than the alpha and delta variants, and more pediatric cases were seen with omicron compared to the earlier strains.  

Harris told Fox News “I don’t believe we can draw the conclusion that Omicron is more likely to cause MIS-C itself, but given how rampant infection with Omicron has been, the shear number of COVID-19 positive children was going to manifest with increased cases of MIS-C.” The pediatrician said this underscores the fact that COVID-19 is not a benign illness in the pediatric population. 

Child patient receives artificial ventilation in hospital
(herjua)

 The Emergency Department physician told Fox News that at his tertiary children’s hospital; they have seen 110 cases of MIS-C since the start of the pandemic. The children’s ages ranged from 6 months to 19 years, averaging 8-9 years old. Harris said of those cases, 50% (55 patients) required admission to the intensive care unit and a majority required hemodynamic support.  

Thankfully, Harris said there had been no reported deaths in these cases from MIS-C.  

“Clinically, these children present with several days of fever, will typically have a rash, and often significant abdominal pain,” Harris told Fox News. The pediatrician also said blood work revealed severe inflammation and the children often rapidly decompensated.  

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Harris cautioned that parents should monitor children for a fever that lasts more than 3-4 days (without another obvious cause, such as strep infection, ear infections, or the flu), especially if they had COVID in the past several weeks or were exposed to a person infected with COVID during that period. The pediatrician said if a child does develop a rash, a prolonged fever, red/injected eyes, or abdominal pain, to get the child evaluated with their pediatrician or the pediatric emergency department. 

MIS-C is typically treated with steroids and intravenous immunoglobulins to help reduce the inflammatory response, Harris explained to Fox News. Harris also discussed the potential heart issues associated with such inflammation.  

Mother and child hold hands in a medical setting.
(iStock)

“They often require cardiovascular support because MIS-C causes inflammation of the heart, called myocarditis,” Harris told Fox News but did say most children do recover and few have long-term effects.  

“I am not aware of any fatalities from MIS-C, though nationwide there have been close to 900 pediatric deaths from COVID-19 infection,” Harris told Fox News. He also stressed the importance of vaccines in reducing the risk of infection, which thereby reduces the risk for MIS-C.  

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“While MIS-C is still rare, these children get incredibly sick, and it is likely that more robust vaccination in those patients who were eligible may have mitigated this somewhat,” Dr. Aaron Glatt, a spokesperson for the Infectious Diseases Society of America commented to Fox News about this report. 

Glatt, an epidemiologist for Mount Sinai South Nassau Hospital on Long Island, said there have been more pediatric hospitalizations with omicron than with prior variance strains. 

Glatt told Fox in an interview, “Children who are hospitalized because of COVID are frequently not vaccinated. Vaccination also prevents some complications of COVID even if you do get infected.”  

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Virginia Reports First Child Death from MIS-C, Illness Linked to COVID-19 – NBC4 Washington

A child in Virginia has died from a serious syndrome linked to COVID-19, known as MIS-C, marking the first reported death from the illness in the state.

The Virginia Department of Health said the child was between 10 and 19 years old and lived in the Prince William Health District.

Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children is a rare but serious condition linked to the coronavirus which causes different body parts, such as the heart, lungs, brain, or gastrointestinal organs, to become inflamed, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

It is not clear what exactly causes the syndrome, but it has been detected in many children who had COVID-19. Some of the most common symptoms are an ongoing fever and one or more of the following: stomach pain, bloodshot eyes, diarrhea, dizziness or lightheadedness, skin rash, and/or vomiting.

No further information about the child will be released out of respect for the family and to protect their privacy, the health department said. 

“We are devastated by this sad news, and our hearts go out to the family and friends of this child,” Virginia Health Commissioner M. Norman Oliver said in a statement.

Oliver urged families to get vaccinated and practice safety measures, such as wearing masks, especially during the busy holiday season.

Parents should go to the nearest hospital emergency room if they believe their child shows any severe MIS-C warning signs such as trouble breathing, pain or pressure in the chest that doesn’t go away; confusion or unusual behavior; severe abdominal pain; inability to wake or stay awake; or pale, gray or blue-colored skin, lips or nail beds.

One hundred eleven cases of MIS-C have been diagnosed in Virginia, according to data from the state’s health department.

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COVID in kids: Uptick reported in MIS-C, rare inflammatory syndrome in children, following delta variant surge

A number of pediatric hospitals across the country are warning about an increase in the number of cases of multi-system inflammatory syndrome in children, a rare condition in which different parts of the body, including the heart, lungs, kidneys, brain, skin, eyes or gastrointestinal organs, become inflamed.

The uptick follows the country’s most recent summer delta surge in pediatric infections.

MIS-C, which most often appears four to six weeks after a COVID-19 infection, can be serious and potentially deadly, but most children who are diagnosed with it recover with medical care, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Federal data shows that there have been at least 46 confirmed MIS-C deaths and 5,217 confirmed MIS-C cases — and about 61% of the reported cases have occurred in children who are Hispanic/Latino or Black. Children between the ages of 6 to 11, who may soon be eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine, have reported the highest number of MIS-C cases since the onset of the pandemic.

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Nearly 5.9 million children have tested positive for COVID-19, and MIS-C infections represent only 0.0009% of COVID-19 pediatric cases. However, between July and August, the average number of daily MIS-C cases nearly doubled.

“MIS-C happens about four to six weeks after a primary COVID infection, and we know that the delta variant has really impacted kids, more than previous waves have done, and so it’s not really that big of a surprise a couple weeks after your first cases of COVID start rolling, and then you start seeing your MIS-C cases roll in,” Dr. Amy Edwards, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at UH Rainbow Babies and Children’s Hospital in Cleveland, told ABC News Friday, in reference to the facility’s recent uptick.

Dayton Children’s Hospital told ABC News they too have seen an uptick in recent weeks. And it is not just in Ohio where officials are seeing increases. In Tennessee, the number of MIS-C cases has more than tripled since early February.

We saw a dramatic increase in COVID-19 cases in children over the past two months with the delta variant surge in our region,” Dr. Sophie Katz, assistant professor of pediatric infectious diseases at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt said in a press release on Wednesday. “Unfortunately, we anticipate an increase in MIS-C cases following this spike.”

SEE ALSO: Teen dies from rare COVID-19-related condition

Earlier this week, officials from Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri, said at a press conference that their physicians have seen an uptick in MIS-C in recent weeks as more children test positive.

“I saw three with MIS-C personally last week,” said Dr. Angela Myers, the division director of infectious diseases at Children’s Mercy. “I think we’ve had more [children] continue to get admitted to the hospital since then. That’s more than the zero we had multiple months before that.”

And on Wednesday, the University of Mississippi Medical Center, which houses Mississippi’s only pediatric hospital, reported that the state is still seeing acute cases of COVID-19 and MIS-C in children.

“What we have now is both MIS-C and severe acute COVID-19, and I think it’s because of schools dropping mask mandates,” Dr. Charlotte Hobbs, professor of pediatric infectious diseases and director of UMMC’s MIS-C clinic, said in a statement. “We saw this drop of acute COVID-19, and then MIS-C, and now acute COVID-19 is increasing again. Acute COVID and MIS-C at the same time is something that has not happened before, and it is preventable.”

Utah native Sharella Ruffin’s 6-year-old son, Zyaire, contracted the rare syndrome earlier this month.

“How can something like that take over your kid’s life in like a week? I’m not understanding that. It was like the most scariest things that ever happened in my life. No mother should ever have to hear that your baby might not make it,” Ruffin told ABC News Friday. “To see your 6-year-old son just laying there. And he’s scared and don’t know what’s going on.”

According to the CDC, the best way for a parent to protect their child is by taking “everyday actions” to prevent COVID-19, including mask-wearing and hand-washing.

At this time, severe illness due to COVID-19 remains “uncommon” among children, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association.

However, any acute illness from COVID-19 and death in a child is concerning, Dr. Richard Besser, a pediatrician and former acting director of the CDC, told ABC’s “Good Morning America” on Friday.

“One of the myths that is out there is that this COVID pandemic isn’t affecting children. There have been over 600 children who died. There have been thousands who have been hospitalized,” Besser said.

Experts continue to emphasize the urgency for not only children to be vaccinated, when eligible, but also for their parents and all of those in the communities around them to get the shot as soon as possible.

ABC News’ Felicia Biberica, Kelly Landrigan and Kristen Red-Horse contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2021 ABC News Internet Ventures.



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Some children’s hospitals see another surge in rare Covid-19 complication MIS-C

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday it has seen a 12% increase in reports of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children, or MIS-C, since late August. Doctors at a handful of children’s hospitals around the country say they are still treating more MIS-C cases than they had been earlier in the year, even though MIS-C is considered rare.

“We had a nice long break from those cases over the summer and even into the fall where we could get an occasional MIS-C case here and there, but in the last three or four weeks, there has definitely been an uptick. And I would anticipate that to continue through the next several weeks,” said Dr. Amy Edwards, an infectious disease specialist at UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital in Cleveland.

CDC said it is aware of 5,217 cases reported through October 4. At least 46 children have died from MIS-C — a more than 12% increase in deaths from the month before and one of the largest increases this year.
Overall, children are much less likely than adults to be hospitalized or to die from Covid-19. More than 5.9 million children have been diagnosed with Covid-19, but MIS-C cases make up a minute fraction — far less than 1%– of all cases identified among children.

Doctors don’t know for sure what causes MIS-C. Often kids have Covid-19 first, but not always. For those few kids that do go on to develop MIS-C, the condition seems to inflame different parts of the body, and it can be serious.

CDC advises parents or caregivers to contact a doctor right away if a child has a fever, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, neck pain, rash, bloodshot eyes or extra tiredness.

At Children’s National in DC, the uptick in cases just started last week, according to Dr. Roberta DeBiasi, chief of the Division of Pediatric Diseases. This wave of new MIS-C cases hasn’t been as big as two surges earlier in the year where they saw up to about 60 MIS-C patients. For this wave, they’ve had about 18 MIS-C patients so far.

At Children’s Hospital Colorado, they too saw “significantly” more MIS-C cases in September, compared to previous months, according to Dr. Sam Dominguez, a pediatric disease expert at the hospital. But he said they aren’t seeing the same rates as they were seeing in December 2020 and January 2021.

Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta also noted an increase in MIS-C cases in late September, about nine weeks after the area saw a spike in cases.

During the past four weeks, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta has treated 58 children with MIS-C — nearly 20% of all the MIS-C cases they’ve treated so far — but Jennifer Burkhardt, a spokesperson for the hospital, said that MIS-C is still considered rare. It has occurred in less than 5% of the almost 7,400 children they’ve treated for Covid-19.

Burkhardt said to prevent MIS-C and Covid-19, the hospital strongly recommends that everyone who is eligible get the vaccine. Georgia’s vaccination rate lags far behind the rest of the country. While more than 56% of the US population is fully vaccinated, according to the CDC, only 48% of Georgia’s eligible population has been fully vaccinated and only 46% of Georgia’s teens have, according to the Georgia Department of Health.

The uptick in cases has not impacted the country evenly. Regions with smaller spikes in Covid-19 cases, such as Chicago, do not report an increase in MIS-C, according to Dr. Bill Muller, an infectious disease specialist at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago. “We did see a surge of Covid-19 cases with Delta, including increased hospitalizations, but it wasn’t anywhere near what the South had,” Muller said.

Doctors say that’s why vaccines are so important, even if the little children aren’t eligible to get a vaccine. The adults around them who can will help get the community’s case numbers down. If the number of Covid-19 cases are lower, there is a much smaller chance kids will develop MIS-C.

The kids that seem most vulnerable to MIS-C seem to share similar demographic traits. Most reported MIS-C cases were among children and adolescents between 5 and 13, with an average age of about 9, CDC said. More than half, 59%, were in males. MIS-C has disproportionately affected children of color. In its latest update, CDC said 61% of reported cases are in children who are Latino or non-Hispanic Black.

Edwards at UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital in Cleveland said a lot of the kids they treat for MIS-C had mild or even asymptomatic coronavirus infections first. She said that’s something for parents to keep in mind.

“Even if you’re not sure whether your kid had Covid, if they had mild symptoms after being exposed to somebody, but then they got better and then about a month later, they seem to be getting sick again, especially if they have a very high fever, I would err on the side of having them checked out sooner rather than later,” Edwards said. “What we know about MIS-C is the earlier you intervene, the less sick the kids seem to get.”

DeBiasi at Children’s National said that they have had great success treating patients with MIS-C. Treatment includes fluids, respiratory support, anti-inflammatories and an immunoglobulin infusion. “Even the sickest kids with MIS-C who are in the intensive care unit and need a lot of support, really seem to turn around relatively quickly once they get the immunoglobulin started quickly,” DeBiasi said.

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MIS-C: Some children’s hospitals see a surge in rare Covid-19 complication

He didn’t have a sore throat or cough. His Covid-19 tests came back negative, twice.

Then what had been a low-grade fever crept up to 104.4.

“That’s when I knew something was really wrong,” she said. “Some people’s children spike those types of fevers, my kids never do.”

Doctors don’t know what causes it. Often kids have Covid-19 first, but not always. The novel coronavirus doesn’t usually cause severe disease in children, but for those few kids that do go on to develop MIS-C, the condition seems to inflame different parts of the body, and it can be serious.
What doctors do know is that various children’s hospitals around the country have reported seeing a higher number of cases these past few months, even though MIS-C is considered rare.

In an update released Friday, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said there have been 2,617 MIS-C cases in the United States before March 1, and 33 children have died. That’s up from early February, when 2,060 cases and 30 deaths had been reported.

‘It scared the bejuses out of me’

In February, when her son was ill, Dunn looked MIS-C up online. Many of her son’s symptoms matched.

The CDC advises parents or caregivers to contact a doctor right away if kids have fever, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, neck pain, rash, bloodshot eyes or extra tiredness.

Nolan’s stomach hurt to the touch. His lips were chapped. His tongue was swollen, and by the time they were back at the pediatrician’s office, his eyes were turning bright red.

The pediatrician took one look at him, told her to leave her office and drive straight to Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago.

“It scared the bejuses out of me,” she said.

When they got to the hospital, she asked Nolan to read the sign that told them where valet parking was. He said he couldn’t. Everything was blurry.

“He has perfect vision,” Dunn said. “I told him, ‘Oh boy, you’re really falling apart.’ “

The hospital ran lots of tests, Nolan said.

“I had every single symptom you could think of,” Nolan said. “I had an IV hooked up to me and felt fatigued and sore. My entire body just felt upset everywhere. I don’t really know how to explain it or pinpoint to a singular feeling.”

Doctors were able to pinpoint the problem and determined it was MIS-C. They treated him with a 10-hour immunoglobulin drip and started him on a steroid.

“By the next morning he was markedly better,” Dunn said.

More than half the reported MIS-C cases, 59%, were in males and most are in children and adolescents ages 1 to 14, the CDC said. Nolan is 13.

MIS-C has also disproportionately affected children of color. In its latest update, CDC said 66% of reported cases are in children who are Latino, 842 cases, or non-Hispanic Black, 746 cases.

MIS-C surges follow Covid-19 spikes

In the past few months, many children’s hospitals, not just Chicago’s, saw more cases than they had earlier in the pandemic.

“January, we just saw a huge number. We saw one a day,” said Dr. Roberta DeBiasi, chief of the Division of Pediatric Diseases at Children’s National Research Institute in Washington, DC. “And then in February, we were on track for that or even more, there’s some days we’re having two and three cases.”

The surge, DeBiasi thinks, isn’t due to the rise in variants, or any other phenomenon.

Typically, a surge in MIS-C follows a surge in Covid-19 cases.

The multidisciplinary MIS-C committee at her hospital noticed the trend, and as soon as they saw the spike in Covid-19 cases around the holidays, they prepared for the kids they knew would soon come four to six weeks later.

“You could set your calendar to it,” DeBiasi said.

Perhaps because it is so rare, some pediatricians — and the parents who come to them for help — don’t know exactly what they’re seeing. That was especially true at the start of the pandemic.

Tammie Hairston’s son, Kyree McBride, came down with a stomachache last May.

“At the time, I hadn’t heard about the MIS-C,” Hairston said.

At first, she and a few different doctors, including those in the ER, thought it was a routine stomach virus.

Even with Tylenol and Motrin, she said, Kyree’s fever wouldn’t go away.

“Instantly, I went into panic mode because my son never gets sick,” Hairston said.

When Hairston had to go back to the store for a second bottle of Tylenol and Motrin, she got even more worried. In addition to the fever, he had become lethargic, but couldn’t sleep. His heart was racing. His eyes started turning red.

When a friend called to tell her a story she’d seen on the news about MIS-C, Hairston told her son to hurry up and put clothes on. They were going to the hospital.

At Children’s National, doctors confirmed Kyree had MIS-C. He never did test positive for Covid-19, but tests detected antibodies, suggesting previous infection. Tests also showed Kyree had inflammation in his heart.

“It was terrifying,” Hairston said. “But you just have to be a mom and you have to be strong for him.”

She said their family and friends prayed he’d get better.

“We didn’t really know what to expect,” Hairston said. “He’s a kid. He’s my baby.”

Fortunately, the 12-hour infusion of immunoglobulin worked, and other than a few follow up appointments with the cardiologist, he’s back to riding bikes and playing basketball in the park. The experience, though, rattled Hairston, who wondered why her son got this rare disease.

“I have family members who have had Covid, along with the grandbabies, and the little ones, and I’m just wondering why none of them got MIS-C, but my son did,” Hairston asks. “Not that I’m wishing this on any kid.”

Scientists also want to know. The National Institutes of Health announced Tuesday that it will launch a new effort to support MIS-C research.

Hairston enrolled Kyree in another study, hoping other parents won’t have to wonder why their kid got MIS-C. Maybe what they can learn from Kyree will mean they won’t get it in the first place.

Life after MIS-C

Twelve-year-old Caden Hendricks and his older son had Covid-19 in November. About four weeks to the day after, Caden complained about a stiff neck, stomachache and a high temperature.
Maylan Hendricks took his son to Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, where he spent 12 days.

“One of the things that makes this disease really scary is you really don’t know exactly what’s going on and causing the problem,” Hendricks said.

Caden has recovered. Still, doctors aren’t sure what recovery means and what, if any, long-term problems MIS-C may bring.

A study released Friday in JAMA Neurology said that neurologic symptoms are common among children hospitalized for Covid-19 or MIS-C; although symptoms resolved for most patients, some developed into life-threatening conditions. And a study published in March encourages doctors to follow-up with these patients to make sure there aren’t any cognitive, developmental or physical issues.

The Cincinnati Children’s Hospital is enrolling patients in a large NIH trial that is trying to understand the long-term effects of severe Covid-19 in children.

“Most of our children are recovering pretty well, but we don’t know whether this is going to have long-term effects, particularly on the heart. That’s what we’re most concerned about and most want to understand,” Dr. Grant Schulert, a pediatric rheumatologist at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital said.

The hospital asked Caden to come back in six months for a cardiology appointment. He also needs a follow up with an ophthalmologist to make sure there’s no long-term damage to his eyes.

Most children seem to do well after having MIS-C. Although it made Caden miss his basketball season, his team gave him the game ball and wore “Caden strong” shirts in his honor. He will be allowed to play basketball in the spring, Hendricks said.

“He’s bouncing back and that’s all we can hope for,” he said.

Dr. Sam Dominguez said his hospital, Children’s Hospital Colorado, also saw “a dramatic increase” in cases in December through February. It’s part of a multicenter study that will follow up with patients for up to a year to make sure there are no long-term complications from MIS-C.

“The kids we are seeing are pretty sick and about half to two thirds need our ICU,” Dominguez said. “Thankfully, most of our kids do very well with aggressive therapy.”

While MIS-C, is still relatively rare, Dr. Larry Kociolek, the associate medical director of infection prevention and control at Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago, hopes parents will be on the lookout for MIS-C.

Better still, he said, he hopes parents will help their kids avoid exposure to Covid-19: Make sure kids wear a mask that fits, wash hands frequently, and keep the proper physical distance.

“I think all children are at risk,” Kociolek, said. “Like with every aspect of this pandemic, people just can’t get comfortable.”

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Coronavirus pandemic: Los Angeles County sees uptick in MIS-C cases, even as COVID hospitalizations decline

LOS ANGELES (KABC) — Amid a decline in coronavirus hospitalizations in Los Angeles County, health officials are turning their attention to how COVID-19 is affecting children.

As schools move closer to reopening for in-person instruction, there are now 100 cases of multisystem inflammatory syndrome, a serious condition linked to coronavirus.

That number marks a 77% increase in MIS-C cases over the past month. Officials suspect it is connected to a surge prompted by holiday activity.

Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Austin Beutner said campuses could reopen by April 9, depending on vaccine availability.

Starting Monday, California will allocate about 10% of first doses of COVID-19 vaccines to teachers and support staff, officials said.

MORE: Simi Valley teen dies of MIS-C, rare illness linked to COVID

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