Hong Kong Med J 2025;31:Epub 28 Nov 2025
© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
COMMENTARY
Reye syndrome or not: an age-old enigma about
influenza encephalopathy deaths in children
KL Hon, MB, BS, MD1,2; Alexander KC Leung, MB, BS, FRCPC3; SL Ng, MB, BS, MRCPCH2; WF Hui, MB, ChB, MRPCH2; Karen KY Leung, MB, BS, MRPCH2; Paul KS Chan, MB, BS, FRCPath4; SY Qian, MD5
1 Department of Paediatrics, CUHK Medical Centre, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
2 Department of Paediatreics and Adolescent Medicine, Hong Kong Children’s Hospital, Hong Kong SAR, China
3 Department of Pediatrics, The University of Calgary and The Alberta Children’s Hospital, Calgary, Canada
4 Department of Microbiology, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
5 Department of Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, Beijing Children’s Hospital, Capital Medical University, National Center for Children’s Health, Beijing, China
Corresponding author: Dr KL Hon (ehon@hotmail.com)
Paediatric perspectives on occasional influenza
morbidity and rare mortality in Hong Kong in the
pre–COVID-19 era have been discussed.1 2 The
world is now facing a rebound of viral respiratory
infections, with an increase in paediatric intensive
care admissions in the post–COVID-19 era.3 Sadly,
in 2024, the Centre for Health Protection reported
two cases of influenza-related mortality. A fully
influenza-vaccinated child developed fulminant
encephalopathy and hepatopathy (with elevated
intracranial pressure and cerebral herniation,
coagulopathy, deranged liver function without
jaundice, hyperammonaemia, or hypoglycaemia) and
died within 2 days.4 There was no history of aspirin
consumption, but the child had received herbal
medicine prior to the development of encephalopathy.
Earlier, another unvaccinated toddler died shortly
after developing acute encephalopathy and cerebral
oedema associated with influenza.5
Influenza has received global attention,
except perhaps during the peak COVID-19 era
from 2020 to 2022. It is a respiratory virus for
which both prophylaxis through immunisation and
treatment with specific antiviral medications are
readily available.6 Severe influenza complications,
particularly encephalopathy, occur every year,
especially in unvaccinated children who do not
receive antiviral treatment.1 In 2020, during the early
period of the COVID-19 pandemic, we successfully
managed a child with high fever, seizures, and an
altered conscious state.2 Nasopharyngeal aspirate
testing confirmed influenza A H1-2009. The child
was treated with the antiviral oseltamivir. Cerebral
oedema was promptly relieved with dexamethasone,
hypertonic saline, and mannitol infusion. The child
stabilised after 48 hours of paediatric intensive
care. Neither the mother nor the child had
received the seasonal influenza vaccination. This
case demonstrates that, despite potential serious
sequelae, influenza-associated encephalopathy can
be successfully treated with prompt critical care management.2 7
Pre-pandemic live-attenuated influenza
vaccination might potentially reduce childhood
mortality in Hong Kong.8 A recent study by Chiu
et al9 estimated that the effectiveness of influenza
vaccination in reducing hospitalisation among
children was 90%. Fortunately, despite the high
influenza burden among Hong Kong children,
mortality and severe complications remain generally
low.1 10 Nevertheless, severe influenza complications
in children have occurred annually, primarily among
the unvaccinated, and have accounted for one to three
deaths each year in Hong Kong.1 Recently, two cases of acute necrotising encephalopathy in unvaccinated
paediatric patients were reported in the Hong Kong
medical literature.11 A publication in the Hong Kong
Medical Journal reported that SFTPB and PDE3A
are independent host susceptibility genes for severe
influenza A (H1N1) infection in the Hong Kong
Chinese population.12
We now have sufficient data in the Hong
Kong literature to reassure the public that influenza
vaccination is recommended as prophylaxis to
reduce the already low complication rates among
children. Increased vaccination coverage will
also enhance herd immunity against influenza
viruses. Other measures to reduce the incidence of
seasonal influenza in the community include regular
handwashing, avoiding contact with individuals who
have respiratory illnesses, practising respiratory
hygiene and cough etiquette, and wearing masks
during epidemics. With heightened attention to
personal hygiene and widespread mask-wearing, the
incidence of influenza and respiratory viral diseases
was greatly reduced in 2003 during the outbreak
of the severe acute respiratory syndrome. These
measures were also instrumental in combating the
COVID-19 outbreak in 2019.13
Two perplexing dilemmas arise from the recent
fatal cases. First, could children develop fulminant
fatal encephalopathy despite receiving effective immunisations and antiviral treatment? This
concern is often raised by anti-vaccine proponents.
Although neurological complications after influenza
vaccination have been reported, fatal encephalopathy
following influenza infection in vaccinated children
had not been reported until recently.14 15 Thus,
the recent case of fatal acute encephalopathy in a
vaccinated child4 is exceptionally unusual.
Second, could fatal encephalopathy with
hepatopathy result from Reye syndrome?14 15 Reye
syndrome associated with influenza infection was
not uncommon before 1980, but its prevalence
substantially dropped after warnings against aspirin
use in children during viral infections were issued in
the mid-1980s.16 In a recent report from the United
States, the incidence of Reye syndrome was only two
among approximately 30 000 influenza-associated
hospitalisations (0.01%), whereas encephalopathy
occurred in 1.7%.17 It is a rapidly progressive brain
disease.14 15 Symptoms of Reye syndrome include
vomiting, personality changes, confusion, seizures,
and loss of consciousness. Whereas liver toxicity
and hepatomegaly typically occur in the syndrome,
jaundice usually does not.14 15 Death occurs in 20% to
40% of those affected, and about one-third of survivors
experience clinically significant brain damage.14 15 18
Treatment includes rigorous intracranial pressure
control, as well as the use of dexamethasone,
mannitol, intravenous immunoglobulin, and
tocilizumab.19 The exact cause of Reye syndrome
remains unknown.14 15 The syndrome usually
begins shortly after recovery from a viral infection,
especially influenza or chickenpox. About 90% of
reported paediatric cases are associated with aspirin
(salicylate) use.14 15 Accordingly, aspirin should be
avoided in children, except in those with Kawasaki
disease.18 Importantly, many herbal and proprietary
medicines contain undisclosed salicylate, aspirin,
or aspirin-like compounds.20 21 The possibility that
herbal medicine contributed to Reye syndrome
cannot be excluded, although other potential
triggers include non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs, influenza, chickenpox, and inborn errors of
metabolism.15 18 22 The diagnosis of Reye syndrome
greatly decreased in the 1980s, when genetic testing
for inborn errors of metabolism became available
in industrialised nations.23 A study of 49 Reye
syndrome cases showed that most surviving patients
had underlying metabolic disorders, including fatty
acid oxidation defects such as medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency.24
Laboratory abnormalities observed in patients
with Reye syndrome include considerably elevated
aminotransferase activity, hyperammonaemia,
hypoglycaemia, prolonged prothrombin time,
and metabolic acidosis.14 15 However, Reye
syndrome remains a clinical diagnosis; affected patients typically present with hepatopathy and
encephalopathy. The syndrome most commonly
affects children,14 15 and most cases occur in winter
or spring. Reye syndrome affects fewer than one in a
million children worldwide each year.14 15 Other risk
factors include inborn errors of metabolism18 and genetic aberrations such as RANBP2.
The US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention has defined Reye syndrome using
the following criteria: (1) clinically documented
acute non-inflammatory encephalopathy with
altered consciousness; and (2) cerebrospinal fluid
containing ≤8 leukocytes/mm3, or cerebral oedema
without perivascular or meningeal inflammation
in histological specimens.25 Hepatopathy should
be documented by liver biopsy, autopsy consistent
with Reye syndrome, or a ≥3-fold increase in serum
glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase, serum glutamic-pyruvic
transaminase, or serum ammonia levels.
There should be no other reasonable explanation
for the cerebral and hepatic abnormalities. In
practice, not all investigations, such as lumbar
puncture or liver biopsy, can be performed in a
critically ill child. Consequently, the diagnosis is
often made by exclusion and remains largely clinical.
In this particular case, influenza complicated by
Reye or Reye-like syndrome with hepatopathy and
encephalopathy leading to the child’s death remains
a possibility that cannot be excluded.14 15 26 27 28 Thus,
the diagnosis of Reye syndrome is primarily clinical;
histological confirmation is rarely performed or
required. The diagnosis of Reye syndrome in a patient
with neurological manifestations can be challenging.
The differential diagnosis includes conditions that
cause vomiting and altered consciousness, or so-called
Reye-like syndromes, such as inborn errors
of metabolism, neuromuscular diseases, meningitis,
encephalitis, adverse drug reactions, and toxic
exposures to plants and chemicals that induce
encephalopathy and hepatocellular injury.15 The
management is supportive. Hong Kong has invested
substantial efforts in preventing and managing
common and emerging respiratory infections.
Meanwhile, the Centre for Health Protection
reports new influenza mortality and morbidity
in unvaccinated children as the winter surge
approaches in 2025.29 30 Rather than arousing fear
through rare, isolated tragic cases, authorities should
take the opportunity to reassure the public that
influenza-associated mortality is rare and morbidity
remains occasional. The promotion of good health
practices—such as immunisations, avoidance of
aspirin-containing compounds, prompt diagnosis,
and rapid initiation of treatment for children with
influenza—cannot be over-emphasised. Efforts to
reduce vaccine phobia and hesitancy remain integral
components of effective preventive medicine.20
Author contributions
All authors contributed equally to the concept or design,
acquisition of data, analysis or interpretation of data, drafting
of the manuscript, and critical revision of the manuscript for
important intellectual content. All authors had full access to
the data, contributed to the study, approved the final version
for publication, and take responsibility for its accuracy and
integrity.
Conflicts of interest
As an editor of the journal, KL Hon was not involved in the peer review process. Other authors declared no conflicts of
interest.
Funding/support
This commentary received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.
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