Changes in Seasonal Patterns of Pediatric Respiratory Viral Infections Before, During, and After the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Seventeen-Year Surveillance Study in the Republic of Korea.
The coronavirus disease 19 pandemic disrupted pediatric respiratory infections through non-pharmaceutical interventions and altered contact patterns. Long-term comparisons across the pandemic timeline in children remain limited. In this study, we analyzed 15,657 respiratory specimens from patients ≤ 18 years at Dankook University Hospital (2007-2023) using multiplex polymerase chain reaction assays targeting 15 viruses. Age-stratified positivity rates were compared across pandemic phases. Children ≤ 6 years comprised 88.61% of the study population. Human rhinovirus showed the highest detection rate (24.06%), followed by adenovirus (12.33%), respiratory syncytial virus-subtypes A and B (RSV-A: 11.13%; RSV-B: 8.65%), human parainfluenza virus-type 3 (HPIV-3; 6.21%), human metapneumovirus (HMPV; 5.33%), and enterovirus (2018-2023; EV; 10.96%). Monthly distributions differed (p < 0.001). RSV peaked in late autumn and winter; influenza and seasonal coronaviruses in winter and spring; HMPV, HPIV-3, EV, and human bocavirus in summer and fall. Positivity declined during the pandemic, rebounding in 2023, most prominently among children aged 1-6 years (84.91%). HPIV-3 and EV increased (p < 0.001). RSV-A predominated pre-pandemic, whereas RSV-B showed a non-significant relative increase post-pandemic; no subtype differences occurred during the pandemic. Findings demonstrate pathogen-specific shifts in predominance and seasonality and support ongoing surveillance and pediatric care planning.