| Literature DB >> 32242281 |
Lidia Serra1, Jessica Presa2, Hannah Christensen3, Caroline Trotter4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Meningococcal colonization, or carriage, can progress to invasive meningococcal disease, a serious public health concern, with rapid progression of disease and severe consequences if left untreated. Information on meningococcal carriage and epidemiology in low/middle income American and Asian countries remains sparse. These data are crucial to ensure that appropriate preventive strategies such as vaccination can be implemented in these regions. The goal of this study was to summarize the Neisseria meningitidis carriage literature in low and middle income countries of the Americas and Asia.Entities:
Keywords: Asia; Carriage; LMICs; Latin America; Neisseria meningitidis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32242281 PMCID: PMC7237586 DOI: 10.1007/s40121-020-00291-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Ther ISSN: 2193-6382
PubMed search strings
| Region of Interest | PubMed search string |
|---|---|
| The Americas (South America, Latin America, and the Caribbean) | (Neisseria meningitidis OR N meningitidis) AND (carriage OR colonization OR colonisation OR carrier) AND (Antigua OR Argentina OR Barbuda OR Bahamas OR Barbados OR Belize OR Bolivia OR Brazil OR Costa Rica OR Chile OR Colombia OR Dominica OR Dominican Republic OR Ecuador OR El Salvador OR French Guiana OR Grenada OR Grenadines OR Guatemala OR Guyana OR Guiana OR Haiti OR Honduras OR Jamaica OR Mexico OR Nevis OR Nicaragua OR Panama OR Paraguay OR Peru OR St Kitts OR St Lucia OR St Vincent OR Suriname OR Trinidad OR Tobago OR Uruguay OR Venezuela OR South America OR Latin America OR Caribbean) |
| Asia | (Neisseria meningitidis OR N meningitidis) AND (carriage OR colonization OR colonisation OR carrier) AND (Bangladesh OR Bhutan OR Brunei OR Brunei Darussalam OR Burma OR Cambodia OR China OR Fiji OR India OR Indonesia OR Kiribati OR Laos OR Malaysia OR Maldives OR Marshall Islands OR Micronesia OR Mongolia OR Myanmar OR Nauru OR Nepal OR Palau OR Papua New Guinea OR Philippines OR Samoa OR Solomon Islands OR Sri Lanka OR Thailand OR Timor-Leste OR Tonga OR Tuvalu OR Vanuatu OR Vietnam) |
Summary of studies from low- and middle-income countries of the Americas
| Reference | Population | Settinga | Date | Epidemiology of carriage isolates, % | Risk factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil | |||||
| Nunes et al. [ | Students aged 11–19 years attending 134 municipal or state public schools in Salvador ( | Vaccinated | Sep–Dec 2014 | Overall: 4.9b | Significant risks of carriage 1 household room for sleeping: PR 2.02 ( Only mother/siblings smoked: PR 2.48 ( Attend pubs/parties ≥ 5 ×/month: PR 2.61 ( |
| Moura et al. [ | Students aged 11–19 years attending public schools in Salvador ( | Vaccinated | Sep–Dec 2014 | Overall: NAc By serogroupd MenA: 0 MenB: 11.9 MenC: 3.4 MenE: 6.8 MenW: 3.4 MenX: 0 MenY: 8.5 MenZ: 5.1 NG: 61.0 Capsule null: 50.0 | – |
| Cassio de Moraes et al. [ | Students aged 11–19 years attending 73 schools in Campinas ( | Vaccinated and unvaccinated | May–Jul 2012 | Overall: 9.93b By serogroupb MenB: 0.99 MenC: 1.32 MenE: 0.74 MenW: 0.25 MenY: 0.49 MenZ: 0.08 NG: 6.04 | Carriage by age group, %b 11–13 years ( 14–16 years ( 17–19 years ( Significant independent risk factor for carriage Parental education level: OR 2.14 ( |
| Weckx et al. [ | Subjects aged 1–24 years from 6 basic healthcare units and 3 schools in São Paulo ( | Vaccinated and unvaccinated | Oct 2011–May 2012 | Overall: 9.0b By serogroupd MenA: 0 MenB: 12.6 MenC: 18.4 NG: 60.9 | Carriage by age group, %d MenB most common in 20–24 years ( MenC most common in 15–19 years ( MenY most common in 5–9 years ( |
| Coch Gioia et al. [ | Subjects aged 20–60 years from Miguel Riet Correia University Hospital in Rio Grande do Sul State ( | Vaccinated | 2011 | Overall: 9b | Significant risks of carriage, carriers vs. non-carriers Male sex: 55.5% vs. 27.4% ( Younger age: 26.5 vs. 33.3 years ( Bar attendance: 88.9% vs. 53.8% ( Bar attendance 1–2 ×/month: 72.2% vs. 42.8% ( Mean number of people in the same house: 1.94 vs. 2.66 ( |
| Safadi et al. [ | Subjects working in 2 oil refineries in São Paulo State ( | Post-outbreak; post-vaccination | Mar 29–Jun 30, 2010 | Overall: 21.5b By serogroupd MenB: 16.1 MenC: 48.2 MenE: 14.3 MenY: 12.5 MenW: 8.9 NG: 46.1 | Significant risk of carriage Not completing secondary education: 32.9% among carriers vs. 19.2% among noncarriers ( |
| Barroso [ | Patients with clinical diagnosis of meningococcal disease admitted to Reference Centre, São Sebastião State Institute in Rio de Janeiro ( | Hospitalized patients | – | Carriage rate at admission: 62b Carriage rate on discharge: 4b Carriage rate in close contacts after 10 days of chemoprophylaxis: 0b | – |
| Chile | |||||
| Rubilar et al. [ | Subjects aged 9–19 y ( | – | Apr–Jun 2013 | Overall: NA By serogroupe MenB: carriers, 40; patients, 32 MenC: carriers, 18; patients, < 2 MenW: carriers, 5; patients, 66 NG: carriers, 26; patients, 0 | Carriage by age group, %d 9–10 years: 7.6 11–13 years: 26.6 14–17 years: 49.0 18–19 years: 16.8 |
| Diaz et al. [ | Subjects aged 10–19 years from 19 hospitals, 15 university campuses, and 56 schools in the 3 most populated regions (Metroplitana, Valparaíso, Biobio; | Post-increase in MenW cases; unvaccinated | Apr 15–Jul 6, 2013 | Overall: 6.5 (95% CI: 5.7, 7.3)b By serogroupb MenB: 1.7 MenC: 0.8 MenW: 0.2 MenY: 0.6 MenZ: 0.05 NT: 3.0 | Significant risks of carriage, OR Age: 1.077 ( Number of children in household: 1.182 ( Exposure to tobacco in the household in children aged < 14 years: 0.232 ( Number of smoking cohabitants in children aged < 14 years: 1.784 ( Number of children living in household for children aged < 14 years: 1.245 ( Exposure to tobacco in the household for children aged ≥ 14 years: 1.47 ( Female sex for children aged ≥ 14 years: 0.663 ( |
| Rodriguez et al. [ | University students aged 18–24 years in Santiago ( | – | Oct 2012 | Overall: 4b By serogroupd MenB: 20 MenW: 15 Noncapsulated: 65 | Significant risks of carriage Shared room: 25% of carriers vs. 15% of noncarriers ( Pub attendance: 85% of carriers vs. 63% of noncarriers ( |
| Colombia | |||||
| Moreno et al. [ | Students aged 15–21 years attending 12 secondary and 7 universities in Bogotá (n = 1459) | – | Aug–Oct 2012 | Overall: 6.85b | Carriage by age group, %d Highest in 21 years: 7.0 Lowest in 18 years: 2.5 Significant risk of carriage Engaging in oral sex: OR 1.70 ( |
| Cuba | |||||
| Climent et al. [ | Students aged 0–12 years and 14–22 years attending kindergarten, primary school, high school, military school, or university ( | Unvaccinated and vaccinated | 1983–2005 | Overall: NA By serogroupd MenB: 57.5 MenC: 0 MenW: 1.0 MenZ: 0.5 NG: 40.9 | – |
| Martinez Motas et al. [ | Isolates collected from healthy carriers [ | Epidemic and post-epidemic; unvaccinated and vaccinated [ | 1982–1992 (epidemic period) 1993–2002 (post-epidemic period) | Overall: NA By serogroupd Epidemic period: MenB: 67.6 MenW: 0 MenY: 0 MenZ: 0 NG: 32.4 Post-epidemic period: MenB: 17.3 MenW: 2.2 MenY: 0.4 MenZ: 0.4 NG: 79.7 | – |
| Mexico | |||||
| Espinosa de los Monteros et al. [ | Subjects aged between 15–19 years living in social rehabilitation centers or attending universities and children aged < 5 years attending daycare centers in Mexico City ( | – | Sep 2004–Apr 2005 | Overall: 1.6b Daycare center attendees ( Social rehabilitation living ( University attendees ( By serogroup:d MenC: 24.3 MenY: 29.7 | – |
| Paraguay | |||||
| Chamorro et al. [ | Subjects aged 3–21 years from 4 health services and 22 schools in Asuncion and the metropolitan area ( | Vaccinated and unvaccinated | Mar 2011–Dec 2012 | Overall: 2.1b By serogroupd MenB: 26.0 MenC: 9.0 MenY: 9.0 Men C: 6.0 | – |
Men meningococcal serogroup, NA not available, NG nongroupable, NT nontypeable, OR odds ratio, PR prevalence ratio
aSpecific details regarding setting are described in detail in the “Results”
bPercent of subjects/samples
cReported in Nunes et al. [33]
dPercent of carriers
ePercent of carriers and patients, respectively
Summary of studies from low and middle income countries of Asia
| Reference | Population | Settinga | Date | Epidemiology of carriage isolates, % | Risk factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| China | |||||
| Zhang et al. [ | Cases and close contacts of a jail outbreak ( | Outbreak | May 2010 | Overallb: cellmates, 62.5; other inmates, 24.6 By serogroupc MenB: 21.3 MenC: 61.7 MenW: 2.1 MenY: 2.1 NG: 8.5 | – |
| Zhou et al. [ | Strains from the CDC isolated from throat swabs from 22 provinces ( | Outbreak and post-outbreak; vaccinated | 2003–2008 | Overall: NA By serogroupc MenA: 9.5 MenB: 19.5 MenC: 62.2 MenW: 1.2 MenZ: 0.4 MenX: 0.4 Men29E: 0.4 | – |
| India | |||||
| Jha et al. [ | New military recruits aged 16–25 years living in barracks ( | – | – | Overall: 11.94b | Significant risks of carriage Joint vs. nuclear family structure: Carrier rate 14.4% vs. 7.1% ( Region of origin: Carrier rate North, 11.8%; South, 10.7%; East, 18.0%; West, 8.6%; Central, 4.7% ( |
| Ichhpujani et al. [ | Students aged 6–20 years in Delhi ( | – | 1986–1987 | Overall: 1.64b | – |
| Paul et al. [ | Contacts of 11 index patients ( | Infected patients | Mar–Jun 1985 | Among family/household contacts ( Among all contacts ( | – |
| Malaysia | |||||
| Rohani et al. [ | Army recruits aged 17–24 years undergoing intensive training in an army camp ( | – | Jun 2005 | Overall: 37.0b Men vs. women: 39.2d vs. 19.7e By serogroupc MenA: 3.3 MenW: 4.7 MenX/Z: 81.0 Other than MenW/A–D/X–Z: 5.2 Autoagglutination: 4.7 Cross-reactivity with available antisera: 0.9 | – |
| Nepal | |||||
| Thapa et al. [ | Meningococcal vaccine-naive children aged 5–14 years from 4 schools in Pokhara valley ( | Unvaccinated | 2015 | Overall: 1.4b | Carriage by age group, %b 5–9 years ( 10–14 years ( |
| Philippines | |||||
| Gonzales et al. [ | Students aged 5–24 years from 1 elementary school, 1 high school, and 1 university in Manila ( | – | Aug 2013–Mar 2014 | Overall: 3.7b By serogroupc MenB: 65.7 MenC: 8.6 MenY: 5.7 Multiple serogroups: 5.7f | Carriage by age group, %b 5–9 years ( 10–14 years ( 15–19 years ( 20–24 years ( Significant risk of carriage Age 10–14 years ( |
| Thailand | |||||
| Danchaivijitr et al. [ | Students aged 5–15 years in 3 schools in Nakhon Chaisi District, Nakhon Pathom province ( | – | – | Overall: 14.2b | – |
CDC Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Men meningococcal serogroup, NA not available, NG nongroupable
aSpecific details regarding setting are described in detail in the “Results”
bPercent of subjects/samples
cPercent of carriers
dPercent of 1110 male subjects
ePercent of 71 female subjects
fTwo individuals carried multiple serogroups simultaneously (i.e., MenB/Y/W and MenY/W)
Fig. 1Literature search results. Asterisk articles that did not meet the inclusion criteria or that fulfilled the exclusion criteria were excluded. Dagger one additional study from the authors’ files was included for a total of 15 studies included in this analysis
Fig. 2Summary of literature search results and carriage rates by country in the Americas. Carriage rates are indicated in italics. Additional information on study design and population is provided in Table 2 and Table S2. Asterisk carriage rates not reported in identified study. Dagger does not include carriage rates from outbreaks or related to invasive meningococcal disease cases or their contacts. Population age ranges: a < 5 years (attending daycare) and 15–19 years (living in social rehabilitation centers or students); b 15–21 years (students); c 11–19 years (students); d 11–19 years (students); e 3–21 years (health center attendees and students); f 18–24 years (students); g 10–19 years (hospitals and schools)
Fig. 3Summary of literature search results and carriage rates by country in Asia. Carriage rates are indicated in italics. Additional information on study design and population is provided in Table 3 and Table S3. Asterisk identified studies did not report carriage rates outside of an outbreak setting. Dagger does not include carriage rates related to invasive meningococcal disease cases or their contacts. Population age ranges, a 5–14 years (students); b 6–20 years (students); c 16–25 years (military recruits); d 5–15 years (students); e 17–24 years (military recruits); f 5–24 years (students)
| Meningococcal colonization, or carriage, can progress to invasive meningococcal disease, a serious public health concern, with rapid progression of disease and severe consequences if left untreated. |
| Meningococcal carriage and epidemiology in low/middle income American and Asian countries is unclear, thus presenting a barrier to implementing effective vaccination strategies. |
| The goal of this study was to summarize the |
| Reported carriage prevalence was 1.6–9.9% in the Americas and 1.4–14.2% in Asia. |
| Risk factors for carriage were inconsistent between studies. |
| Comprehensive regional carriage studies are needed to improve disease control. |