This article was taken from: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-61269586
By Michelle Roberts Digital health editor
Investigations suggest two common viruses made a comeback after pandemic lockdowns ended – and triggered the rare but very serious hepatitis cases.
More than 1,000 children – many under the age of five – in 35 countries are thought to have been affected.
Some, including 12 in the UK, have needed a lifesaving liver transplant.
The two teams of researchers, from London and Glasgow, say infants exposed later than normal – because of Covid restrictions – missed out on some early immunity to:
Noah, three, who lives in Chelmsford, Essex, needed an urgent liver transplant after becoming dangerously ill with hepatitis.
His mother, Rebecca Cameron-McIntosh, says the experience has been devastating.
“He’d previously had nothing wrong with him,” she says. “And for it to suddenly go so quickly. I think that’s what kind of took us by surprise.
“We’ve just assumed it was one little problem that will get easily sorted out – but actually it just kept on snowballing.”
Initially, Rebecca was lined up to donate part of her liver – but, after a serious reaction to drugs used, she ended up in intensive care.
Noah was put on the transplant list and, soon after, received a new organ.
His recovery has been good – but he will need to take immunosuppressant drugs for life, to stop his body rejecting the new liver.
Rebecca says: “There is something really heartbreaking about that because you go along following the rules, do what you are supposed to do to protect people that are vulnerable and then, in some horrible roundabout way, your own child has become more vulnerable because you did what you were supposed to do.”
Cases such as this are rare. Most children who catch these types of viruses quickly recover.
It is unclear why some then develop liver inflammation – but genetics might play a part.
Scientists have ruled out any connection with coronavirus or Covid vaccines.
One of the investigators, Prof Judith Breuer, an expert in virology, at University College London, said: “During the lockdown period when children were not mixing, they were not transmitting viruses to each other.
“They were not building up immunity to the common infections they would normally encounter.
“When the restrictions were lifted, children began to mix, viruses began to circulate freely – and they suddenly were exposed with this lack of prior immunity to a whole battery of new infections.”
Prof Emma Thomson, who led the University of Glasgow research, said there were still many unanswered questions. “Larger studies are urgently needed to investigate the role of AAV2 in paediatric hepatitis cases.
“We also need to understand more about seasonal circulation of AAV2, a virus that is not routinely monitored – it may be that a peak of adenovirus infection has coincided with a peak in AAV2 exposure, leading to an unusual manifestation of hepatitis in susceptible young children.”