| Literature DB >> 29304066 |
Betuel Sigaúque1,2, Jennifer R Verani3, Sérgio Massora1, Delfino Vubil1, Llorenç Quintó4, Sozinho Acácio1,2, Inácio Mandomando1,2, Quique Bassat1,4, Tacilta Nhampossa1,2, Fabiana Pimenta3, Charfudin Sacoor1, Maria da Gloria Carvalho3, Eusebio Macete1, Pedro L Alonso1,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) is a major cause of illness and death among children worldwide. 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV10) was introduced as part of the Mozambican routine immunization program in April 2013. We characterized the IPD burden in a rural area of Mozambique before PCV introduction and estimated the potential impact of this intervention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29304066 PMCID: PMC5755904 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0190687
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of IPD cases (n = 768) detected from January 2001 to December 2012 at Manhiça District Hospital, in Mozambique.
| Characteristics | Bacteraemic pneumonia | Bacteraemia (non-Pneumonia) | Meningitis | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n = 498 | n = 218 | n = 52 | N = 768 | |
| n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | |
| 269 (54) | 127 (58) | 29 (56) | 425 (55) | |
| Median (interquartile range) | 14 (8 to 24) | 11 (7 to 20) | 8.5 (4 to 18) | 13 (7 to 23) |
| 0–11 | 195 (39) | 111 (51) | 30 (58) | 336 (44) |
| 12–23 | 174 (35) | 62 (28) | 12 (23) | 248 (32) |
| 24-<60 | 129 (26) | 45 (21) | 10 (19) | 184 (24) |
| 135 (30) | 48 (27) | 22 (45) | 22 (45) | |
| None | 135 (30) | 48 (27) | 22 (45) | 22 (45) |
| Mild | 86 (20) | 51 (28) | 13 (27) | 150 (23) |
| Moderate | 104 (24) | 38 (21) | 11 (22) | 153 (23) |
| Severe | 112 (26) | 44 (24) | 3 (6) | 159 (24) |
| Rainy season (October–March) | 234 (47) | 96 (44) | 26 (50) | 356 (46) |
| Median (interquartile range) | 6 (3 to 9) | 5 (3 to 8) | 3 (2 to 5) | 5 (3 to 9) |
| 0–11 months | 24/169 (14) | 12/97(12) | 12/24(50) | 48/290 (17) |
| 12–23 months | 18/151 (12) | 6/52 (12) | 2/9 (22) | 26/212 (12) |
| 24-<60 months | 17/119 (14) | 3/42 (7) | 1/7 (14) | 21/168 (13) |
| Overall | 59/439 (14) | 21/191 (11) | 15/40 (38) | 95/670 (14) |
*Among for 667 IPD cases with complete weight or age data for weight for age Z-score (waz) calculation (waz >-2 to <-1 Mild; waz>-3 to <-2 Moderate; waz<-3 severe).
** Among 670 IPD cases with known outcome (missing date in 47 among infants (<12 months), 36 among children age 12-<24m and 16 among children age 24-<60).
Incidence rate of IPD among children <5 years old in rural Mozambique per different age groups, in Manhiça District Hospital.
| Age groups (months) | Episodes | Time at risk | Incidence | IRR | 95% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (CYR) | (Episodes per 100,000 CYR | Conf. Interval | |||
| 0–11 | 163 | 34,018 | 1 | ||
| 12–23 | 126 | 32,345 | 0.82 | (0.65–1.04) | |
| 24–59 | 98 | 91,848 | 0.23 | (0.17–0.29) | |
| - | - |
* CAR = children-years at risk.
# IRR = Incidence Rate Ratio.
Fig 1Annual incidence rates of IPD cases among children <5 years of age admitted at Manhiça District Hospital, in Mozambique between 2001–2012.
Fig 2Serotypes distribution of pneumococcal isolates (n = 546) in blood and CSF of children <5 years of age admitted at Manhiça District Hospital, in Mozambique: 2003–2012.
Fig 3Number of IPD cases caused by most common vaccine types among children <5 years of age admitted at Manhica District Hospital, 2003–2012.
Proportion of pneumococcal disease syndromes potentially preventable by PCV formulation, among children < 5 years of age in Mozambique.
| PCV10 | PCV13 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n/N | % | n/N | % | |
| Overall | 383/588 | 65 | 488/588 | 83 |
| Clinical syndromes | ||||
| Bacteraemic pneumonia | 247/375 | 66 | 310/375 | 83 |
| Bacteraemia (non-pneumonia) | 105/165 | 64 | 141/165 | 85 |
| Pneumococcal Meningitis | 31/48 | 65 | 37/48 | 77 |
| Age group | ||||
| 0–11 months | 166/263 | 63 | 210/263 | 80 |
| 12–23 months | 118/187 | 63 | 159/187 | 85 |
| 24–59 months | 99/138 | 72 | 119/138 | 86 |
Antibmicrobial susceptibility for 195 invasive pneumococcal isolates with antimicrobila susecptability performed from children <5 years old, hospitalized at Manhiça District Hospital, Mozambique.
| Antibiotics | Intermediate | Resistant | Range MICs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Erythromycin | 0 | 7 (3.6) | ≤0.03 to >32 |
| Penicillin | 0 | 1 (0.5) | ≤0.03 to 4 |
| Amoxicillin | 0 | 1 (0.5) | ≤0.03 to 4 |
| Cefotaxime | 0 | 0 | ≤0.06 to 1 |
| Clindamycin | 0 | 3 (1.5) | ≤0.03 to >2 |
| Cotrimoxazole | 57 (29.2) | 106 (54.4) | ≤0.12 to >4 |
| Chloramphenicol | - | 28 (14.4) | ≤2 to >8 |
| Tetracycline | 0 | 46 (23.6) | ≤2 to >8 |
# Using CLSI 2011 breakpoints 4ug/ml for intermediate and ≥8ug/ml for resistant for non-meningitis isolates.
*The percentage indicates the pneumococcal isolates resistant or intermediate among the 195 invasive pneumococcal isolates tested for antibiotic susceptibility