Systematic review of reviews of symptoms and signs of COVID-19 in children and adolescents

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Abstract

Objective

To undertake a systematic review of reviews of the prevalence of symptoms and signs of COVID-19 in those aged under 20 years?

Design

Narrative systematic review of reviews. PubMed, medRxiv, Europe PMC and COVID-19 Living Evidence Database were searched on 9 October 2020.

Setting

All settings, including hospitalised and community settings.

Patients

CYP under age 20 years with laboratory-proven COVID-19.

Study review, data extraction and quality

Potentially eligible articles were reviewed on title and abstract by one reviewer. Quality was assessed using the modified AMSTARS criteria and data were extracted from included studies by two reviewers.

Main outcome measures

Prevalence of symptoms and signs of COVID-19

Results

1325 studies were identified and 18 reviews were included. Eight were high quality, 7 medium and 3 low quality. All reviews were dominated by studies of hospitalised children. The proportion who were asymptomatic ranged from 14.6 to 42%. Fever and cough were the commonest symptoms; proportions with fever ranged from 46 to 64.2% and with cough from 32 to 55.9%. All other symptoms or signs including rhinorrhoea, sore throat, headache, fatigue/myalgia and gastrointestinal symptoms including diarrhoea and vomiting are infrequent, occurring in less than 10-20%.

Conclusions

Fever and cough are the most common symptoms in CYP with COVID-19, with other symptoms infrequent. Further research on symptoms in community samples are needed to inform pragmatic identification and testing programmes for CYP.

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