Αρχειοθήκη ιστολογίου

Παρασκευή 24 Νοεμβρίου 2017

Nasopharyngeal s. pneumoniae carriage and density in Belgian infants after 9 years of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine programme

Publication date: Available online 24 November 2017
Source:Vaccine
Author(s): Ine Wouters, Liesbet Van Heirstraeten, Stefanie Desmet, Stéphanie Blaizot, Jan Verhaegen, Herman Goossens, Pierre Van Damme, Surbhi Malhotra-Kumar, Heidi Theeten
BackgroundIn Belgium, the infant pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) programme changed from PCV7 (2007–2011) to PCV13 (2011–2015) and to PCV10 (2015–2016). A 3-year nasopharyngeal carriage study was initiated during the programme switch in 2016. Main objective of the year 1 assessment was to obtain a baseline measurement of pneumococcal carriage prevalence, carriage density, serotype distribution and antibiotic resistance.Materials/methodsTwo infant populations aged 6–30 months and without use of antibiotics in the seven days prior to sampling were approached: (1) attending one of 85 randomly selected day-care centres (DCC); (2) presenting with AOM at study-trained general practitioners and paediatricians. Demographic and clinical characteristics were documented and a single nasopharyngeal swab was taken. S. pneumoniae were cultured, screened for antibiotic resistance and serotyped, and quantitative Taqman real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) targeting LytA was performed.ResultsCulture-based (DCC: 462/760; 60.8% – AOM: 27/39; 69.2%) and LytA-based (DCC: 603/753; 80.1% – AOM: 32/39; 82.1%) carriage prevalence was high. Average pneumococcal DNA load in LytA-positive day-care samples was 6.5 × 106 copies/µl (95%CI = 3.9–9.2 × 106, median = 3.5 × 105); DNA load was positively associated with signs of common cold and negatively with previous antibiotic use. Culture-based frequency of 13 pneumococcal vaccine (PCV) serotypes was 5.4% in DCC and 7.7% in AOM, with 19F and 14 being most frequent, and frequencies below 0.5% for serotypes 3, 6A, 19A in both populations. Predominant non-PCV serotypes were 23B and 23A in day-care and 11A in infants with AOM. In day-care, resistance to penicillin was rare (<0.5%) and absent against levofloxacin; 32.7% and 16.9% isolates were cotrimoxazole- and erythromycin-resistant respectively.ConclusionFour years after PCV13 introduction in the vaccination programme, PCV13 serotype carriage was rare in infants throughout Belgium and penicillin resistance was rare. Continued surveillance in the context of a PCV programme switch is necessary.

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