| Literature DB >> 30789140 |
Heidi M Soeters, Lucy A McNamara, Amy E Blain, Melissa Whaley, Jessica R MacNeil, Susan Hariri, Sarah A Mbaeyi.
Abstract
We reviewed university-based outbreaks of meningococcal disease caused by serogroup B and vaccination responses in the United States in the years following serogroup B meningococcal (MenB) vaccine availability. Ten university-based outbreaks occurred in 7 states during 2013-2018, causing a total of 39 cases and 2 deaths. Outbreaks occurred at universities with 3,600-35,000 undergraduates. Outbreak case counts ranged from 2 to 9 cases; outbreak duration ranged from 0 to 376 days. All 10 universities implemented MenB vaccination: 3 primarily used MenB-FHbp and 7 used MenB-4C. Estimated first-dose vaccination coverage ranged from 14% to 98%. In 5 outbreaks, additional cases occurred 6-259 days following MenB vaccination initiation. Although it is difficult to predict outbreak trajectories and evaluate the effects of public health response measures, achieving high MenB vaccination coverage is crucial to help protect at-risk persons during outbreaks of meningococcal disease caused by this serogroup.Entities:
Keywords: United States; bacteria; bacterial infection; infectious disease; meningitis/encephalitis; meningococcal meningitis; meningococcal vaccines; serogroup B; universities; vaccination recommendations; vaccines
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30789140 PMCID: PMC6390773 DOI: 10.3201/eid2503.181574
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
University-based outbreaks of meningococcal disease caused by serogroup B, United States, 2013–2018
| State of university | Outbreak period | No. cases (deaths) | Approximate no. undergraduates | Clonal complex of outbreak strain | Sequence type of outbreak strain | References |
| New Jersey | 2013 Mar–2014 Mar | 9 (1)* | 5,000 | 41/44 | 409 | ( |
| California | 2013 Nov | 4† | 19,000 | 32 | 32 | ( |
| Rhode Island | 2015 Jan–Feb | 2 | 3,700 | Unassigned | 9069 | ( |
| Oregon | 2015 Jan–May | 7 (1)‡ | 20,000 | 32 | 32 | ( |
| California | 2016 Jan–Feb | 2§ | 5,000 | 32 | 11910 | ( |
| New Jersey | 2016 Mar–Apr | 2 | 35,000 | 11 | 11 | ( |
| Wisconsin | 2016 Oct | 3 | 30,000 | 32 | 11556 | ( |
| Oregon | 2016 Nov–2017 Nov | 5 | 25,000 | 32 | 32 | ( |
| Massachusetts¶ | 2017 Oct–2018 Feb | 3 | 26,000 | 41/44 | 41 | ( |
| Pennsylvania | 2017 Nov | 2# | 3,600 | 32** | 8758** |
*Two of the cases occurred in close contacts of undergraduate students at the outbreak-affected university: 1 in a high school student who stayed in an undergraduate dormitory and 1 in a student at a different university. †One additional associated case that occurred in March 2013 was identified after retrospective case review. An additional case occurred 2 years later in a close contact of an undergraduate student who may have been connected to this outbreak. ‡One case occurred in a close contact of undergraduate students at the outbreak-affected university. §One additional suspected case with inconclusive lab results occurred in February 2016 in a student previously vaccinated with 2 doses of MenB vaccine and who received antimicrobial chemoprophylaxis the day before symptom onset. ¶Cases occurred at 2 universities in a college consortium in the same geographic area. The first 2 cases occurred at University 1 and the third case occurred at University 2. #Cases were close contacts and members of the same athletic team. **An isolate was available for only 1 of the 2 cases, so typing results refer to the single case isolate.
Figure 1Timing of case onset dates and initiation of vaccination efforts during university-based outbreaks of meningococcal disease caused by serogroup B, United States, 2013–2018. MenB, serogroup B meningococcal vaccine.
Vaccination response to university-based outbreaks of meningococcal disease caused by serogroup B, United States, 2013–2018*
| State of university | Primary MenB vaccine | Vaccination strategy | Vaccination coverage | Cases after vaccine implementation |
| New Jersey | MenB-4C† | Mass vaccination campaign | Dose 1, 95%; dose 2, 89% | 1 |
| California | MenB-4C† | Mass vaccination campaign | Dose 1, 51%; dose 2, 40% | 0 |
| Rhode Island | MenB-FHbp | Mass vaccination campaign | Dose 1, 94%; dose 2, 80%; dose 3, 77%‡ | 0 |
| Oregon | MenB-FHbp§ | Mass vaccination campaigns; student health; local pharmacies | Dose 1, 52%; dose 2, 40%; dose 3, 10% | 3¶ |
| California | MenB-4C | Mass vaccination campaign | Dose 1, 90%; dose 2, 90%# | 0 |
| New Jersey | MenB-FHbp | Local providers/pharmacies; student health; some vaccination campaigns | NA | 0 |
| Wisconsin | MenB-4C | Mass vaccination campaign | Dose 1, 67%; dose 2, >31%** | 1¶ |
| Oregon | MenB-4C | Mass vaccination campaign with targeted student groups; vaccine requirement | Dose 1, 98%; dose 2, 93% | 2 |
| Massachusetts†† | MenB-4C | Mass vaccination campaign; student health; providers/pharmacies | Dose 1, 34%**,‡‡; dose 2, 16% | 1 |
| Pennsylvania | MenB-4C | Vaccinated athletic team; campus-wide recommendation for vaccination at student health | Dose 1, 14%; dose 2, 2%** | 0 |
*MenB, serogroup B meningococcal; MenB-4C, Bexsero (GlaxoSmithKline, https://www.gsk.com); MenB-FHbp, Trumenba (Pfizer, https://www.pfizer.com); NA, vaccination coverage estimates not available. †Vaccine available through a CDC-sponsored investigational new drug protocol. ‡Coverage data refer to 2015 campaign. Incoming freshmen and returning study abroad students were also vaccinated in 2015–2016. §MenB-4C was also used in response to this outbreak; 21% of students completed either vaccine series. Presented coverage data for this university are as of July 2018. ¶One case in each of these outbreaks occurred 6 days after MenB vaccination efforts commenced, thus prior to any expected immunity. #This coverage estimate represents the number of persons vaccinated in the second campaign, which likely included some first doses. **Reported coverage reflects only vaccine doses given on campus; additional students received vaccine doses from providers or pharmacies at home or in other states. ††Cases occurred at 2 universities in a college consortium in the same geographic area. The first 2 cases occurred at university 1 and the third case occurred at university 2. Both universities began vaccination efforts following the second case. ‡‡Combined first-dose coverage data for both universities are presented in the table. First-dose coverage was 33% at university 1 (23,388 undergraduates) and 41% at university 2 (2,500 undergraduates) (Figure 2). Vaccination was ongoing at the time of publication; therefore, data should be considered preliminary.
Figure 2Association between university size and first-dose serogroup B meningococcal vaccine coverage in response to university-based outbreaks, United States, 2013–2018.