| Literature DB >> 33916227 |
Maria Garcia Quesada1, Yangyupei Yang1, Julia C Bennett1, Kyla Hayford1, Scott L Zeger1, Daniel R Feikin2, Meagan E Peterson1, Adam L Cohen3, Samanta C G Almeida4, Krow Ampofo5, Michelle Ang6, Naor Bar-Zeev1,7, Michael G Bruce8, Romina Camilli9, Grettel Chanto Chacón10, Pilar Ciruela11,12, Cheryl Cohen13,14, Mary Corcoran15, Ron Dagan16, Philippe De Wals17, Stefanie Desmet18,19, Idrissa Diawara20,21, Ryan Gierke22, Marcela Guevara11,23, Laura L Hammitt1, Markus Hilty24, Pak-Leung Ho25, Sanjay Jayasinghe26, Jackie Kleynhans13,14, Karl G Kristinsson27, Shamez N Ladhani28, Allison McGeer29, Jason M Mwenda30, J Pekka Nuorti31,32, Kazunori Oishi33, Leah J Ricketson34, Juan Carlos Sanz35, Larisa Savrasova36,37, Lena Petrova Setchanova38, Andrew Smith39,40, Palle Valentiner-Branth41, Maria Teresa Valenzuela42, Mark van der Linden43, Nina M van Sorge44, Emmanuelle Varon45, Brita A Winje46, Inci Yildirim47, Jonathan Zintgraff48, Maria Deloria Knoll1.
Abstract
Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) introduction has reduced pneumococcal meningitis incidence. The Pneumococcal Serotype Replacement and Distribution Estimation (PSERENADE) project described the serotype distribution of remaining pneumococcal meningitis in countries using PCV10/13 for least 5-7 years with primary series uptake above 70%. The distribution was estimated using a multinomial Dirichlet regression model, stratified by PCV product and age. In PCV10-using sites (N = 8; cases = 1141), PCV10 types caused 5% of cases <5 years of age and 15% among ≥5 years; the top serotypes were 19A, 6C, and 3, together causing 42% of cases <5 years and 37% ≥5 years. In PCV13-using sites (N = 32; cases = 4503), PCV13 types caused 14% in <5 and 26% in ≥5 years; 4% and 13%, respectively, were serotype 3. Among the top serotypes are five (15BC, 8, 12F, 10A, and 22F) included in higher-valency PCVs under evaluation. Other top serotypes (24F, 23B, and 23A) are not in any known investigational product. In countries with mature vaccination programs, the proportion of pneumococcal meningitis caused by vaccine-in-use serotypes is lower (≤26% across all ages) than pre-PCV (≥70% in children). Higher-valency PCVs under evaluation target over half of remaining pneumococcal meningitis cases, but questions remain regarding generalizability to the African meningitis belt where additional data are needed.Entities:
Keywords: PCV impact; global; meta-analysis; pneumococcal meningitis; serotype distribution
Year: 2021 PMID: 33916227 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9040738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607