| Literature DB >> 29447196 |
Jennifer R Verani1, Sérgio Massora2, Sozinho Acácio2,3, Rita Teresa Dos Santos4, Delfino Vubil2, Fabiana Pimenta1, Iaci Moura1, Cynthia G Whitney1, Maria Helena Costa5, Eusébio Macete2, Maria Benigna Matsinhe6, Maria da Gloria Carvalho1, Betuel Sigaúque2,3.
Abstract
Nasopharyngeal carriage is a precursor for pneumococcal disease and can be useful for evaluating pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) impact. We studied pre-PCV pneumococcal carriage among HIV-infected and -uninfected children in Mozambique. Between October 2012 and March 2013, we enrolled HIV-infected children age <5 years presenting for routine care at seven HIV clinics in 3 sites, including Maputo (urban-south), Nampula (urban-north), and Manhiça (rural-south). We also enrolled a random sample of HIV-uninfected children <5 years old from a demographic surveillance site in Manhiça. A single nasopharyngeal swab was obtained and cultured following enrichment in Todd Hewitt broth with yeast extract and rabbit serum. Pneumococcal isolates were serotyped by Quellung reaction and multiplex polymerase chain reaction. Factors associated with pneumococcal carriage were examined using logistic regression. Overall pneumococcal carriage prevalence was 80.5% (585/727), with similar prevalences among HIV-infected (81.5%, 339/416) and HIV-uninfected (79.1%, 246/311) children, and across age strata. Among HIV-infected, after adjusting for recent antibiotic use and hospitalization, there was no significant association between study site and colonization: Maputo (74.8%, 92/123), Nampula (83.7%, 82/98), Manhiça (84.6%, 165/195). Among HIV-uninfected, report of having been born to an HIV-infected mother was not associated with colonization. Among 601 pneumococcal isolates from 585 children, serotypes 19F (13.5%), 23F (13.1%), 6A (9.2%), 6B (6.2%) and 19A (5.2%) were most common. The proportion of serotypes included in the 10- and 13-valent vaccines was 44.9% and 61.7%, respectively, with no significant differences by HIV status or age group. Overall 36.9% (n = 268) of children were colonized with a PCV10 serotype and 49.7% (n = 361) with a PCV13 serotype. Pneumococcal carriage was common, with little variation by geographic region, age, or HIV status. PCV10 was introduced in April 2013; ongoing carriage studies will examine the benefits of PCV10 among HIV-infected and-uninfected children.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29447196 PMCID: PMC5813901 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0191113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Prevalence of pneumococcal carriage by HIV infection, HIV exposure, and site.
| Variable | Number tested | Number with | Prevalence | 95% Confidence interval |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIV status | ||||
| Uninfected | 311 | 246 | 79.1 | 74.2 to 83.5 |
| Infected | 416 | 339 | 81.5 | 77.4 to 85.1 |
| HIV exposure, HIV-uninfected | ||||
| Exposed | 52 | 43 | 82.7 | 69.7 to 91.8 |
| Unexposed | 188 | 150 | 79.8 | 73.3 to 85.3 |
| Site, HIV-infected | ||||
| Manhica | 195 | 165 | 84.6 | 78.8 to 89.4 |
| Maputo | 123 | 92 | 74.8 | 66.2 to 82.2 |
| Nampula | 98 | 82 | 83.7 | 74.8 to 90.4 |
* HIV exposure data reported by parent/guardian; missing for 72/311 (23%)
Fig 1Prevalence of pneumococcal colonization among HIV-infected (n = 416) and uninfected (n = 311) children aged <5 years in Mozambique, by age group.
Number at the base of the bar represents the number of children colonized within each strata.
Factors associated with pneumococcal colonization among HIV-infected and–uninfected children aged <5 years in Mozambique.
| Characteristic | HIV-infected | HIV-uninfected | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colonized (n = 339) | Not colonized (n = 77) | Crude odds ratio (95% confidence interval) | Adjusted odds ratio (95% confidence interval) | Colonized (n = 246) | Not colonized | Crude odds ratio (95% confidence interval) | |
| Male sex | 168 (49.6) | 31 (40.3) | 1.458 (0.882, 2.410) | 118 (48.0) | 30 (46.2) | 1.076 (0.622, 1.861) | |
| Age <24 months | 161 (47.5) | 41 (53.2) | 0.794 (0.484, 1.304) | 120 (48.8) | 30 (46.2) | 1.111 (0.642, 1.922) | |
| Malnutrition | |||||||
| None | 171 (50.7) | 34 (45.3) | 170 (70.3) | 43 (69.4) | |||
| Mild | 86 (25.5) | 13 (17.3) | 1.315 (0.660, 2.621) | 47 (19.4) | 15 (24.2) | 0.793 (0.405, 1.550) | |
| Moderate | 45 (13.4) | 17 (22.7) | 0.526 (0.270, 1.027) | 18 (7.4) | 4 (6.4) | 1.138 (0.366, 3.537) | |
| Severe | 35 (10.4) | 11 (14.7) | 0.633 (0.293, 1.368) | 7 (2.9) | 0 (0) | ||
| Ever breastfed | 307 (93.9) | 74 (97.4) | 0.415 (0.095, 1.814) | 233 (97.9) | 60 (96.8) | 1.554 (0.294, 8.207) | |
| Currently breastfeeding | 78 (24.5) | 19 (27.1) | 0.869 (0.484, 1.560) | 87 (37.3) | 19 (30.2) | 1.380 (0.757, 2.514) | |
| Current symptoms | |||||||
| Fever | 17 (5.0) | 3 (4.0) | 1.289 (0.368, 4.513) | 17 (6.9) | 2 (65.0) | 2.349 (0.529, 10.436) | |
| Cough | 44 (13.0) | 6 (7.9) | 1.746 (0.716, 4.260) | 41 (16.7) | 12 (18.5) | 0.888 (0.436, 1.807) | |
| Runny nose | 147 (43.8) | 31 (41.9) | 1.079 (0.648, 1.796) | 103 (42.2) | 21 (32.8) | 1.506 (0.843, 2.692) | |
| Hospitalization in past 3 months | 46 (13.7) | 29 (38.7) | 0.252 (0.144, 0.442) | 3 (1.3) | 0 (0) | ||
| Antibiotic use in past 3 weeks | 28 (8.4) | 18 (24.3) | 0.286 (0.148, 0.551) | 18 (7.4) | 0 (0) | ||
| Attends school | 10 (3.0) | 4 (5.3) | 0.555 (0.169, 1.819) | 5 (2.1) | 1 (1.6) | 1.369 (0.157, 11.931) | |
| Smokers in house | 38 (12.1) | 9 (12.2) | 0.994 (0.458, 2.159) | 35 (15.0) | 11 (17.2) | 0.852 (0.405, 1.789) | |
| ≥6 additional persons living in house | 166 (49.6) | 38 (50.0) | 0.982 (0.597, 1.616) | 149 (60.6) | 36 (55.4) | 1.237 (0.713, 2.149) | |
| Cook with charcoal/wood | 292 (91.3) | 72 (97.3) | 0.290 (0.067, 1.244) | 211 (93.4) | 60 (93.75) | 0.938 (0.300, 2.931) | |
| Walls made of mud or sticks | 143 (43.3) | 34 (44.7) | 0.945 (0.572, 1.560) | 123 (51.3) | 27 (42.86) | 1.402 (0.801, 2.453) | |
| HIV exposure | — | — | — | 43 (22.3) | 9 (19.15) | 1.210 (0.543, 2.699) | |
| Antiretroviral therapy | 258 (76.1) | 57 (74.0) | 1.118 (0.634, 1.971) | — | — | — | |
| Cotrimoxazole prophylaxis | 264 (79.0) | 66 (86.8) | 0.571 (0.279, 1.169) | — | — | — | |
| Site | |||||||
| Manhiça | 165 (48.7) | 30 (39.0) | reference | — | — | — | |
| Maputo | 92 (27.1) | 31 (40.3) | 0.540 (0.307, 0.948) | — | — | — | |
| Nampula | 82 (24.2) | 16 (20.8) | 0.932 (0.481, 1.807) | — | — | — | |
Fig 2Serotype distribution among nasopharyngeal Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates (n = 601) found among HIV-infected and -uninfected children aged <5 years in Mozambique.
Antibiotic susceptibility among pneumococcal isolates (n = 343) obtained from HIV-infected children.
| Antimicrobial agents | Susceptible | Intermediate | Resistant |
|---|---|---|---|
| Penicillin, non-meningitis parenteral | 340 (99.1) | 3 (0.9) | 0 (0) |
| Penicillin, non-meningitis oral | 116 (33.8) | 224 (65.3) | 3 (0.9) |
| Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole | 15 (4.4) | 24 (7.0) | 304 (88.6) |
| Ceftriaxone | 343 (100.0) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Amoxicillin | 339 (98.8) | 3 (0.9) | 1 (0.3) |
| Erythromycin | 286 (83.4) | 1(0.3) | 56 (16.3) |
| Chloramphenicol | 320 (93.3) | 0 (0.0) | 23 (6.7) |
| Rifampin | 341 (99.4) | 0 (0.0) | 2 (0.6) |
MIC interpretative Criteria according with Clinical and Laboratory Standard Institute (2013).