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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Objectives: To track ongoing trends in pneumococcal (Sp) serotype carriage under the selection pressure of
moderate pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) use, children in a community in Portugal were studied
in the same months in 3 consecutive years.
Methods: Nasopharyngeal specimens were collected (children aged 3 months to <7 years) in 8 urban
daycare centers in February 2008 (n = 561) and 2009 (n = 585). Sp isolates were serotyped.
Results: While demographics were similar in 2008–2009 and a previously reported sample in 2007, PCV coverage (at least one dose) in the children studied rose from 76.5% to 84% although national coverage was lower than this. Sp carriage fell from 61% to 51% with a concomitant fall in PCV7 serotype carriage
from 12.1% to 4.3%. Remaining PCV7 serotypes declined to near (23F) or totally (6B, 14) undetectable levels except 19F which persisted unchanged in around 4% of children. Although carriage of 3 and 6C
rose, there was no net increase in non-PCV7 serotypes and no progressive trend in serotype diversity.
Conclusions: Ecological changes induced by PCVs where uptake is moderate appear to be different from high usage settings. We report falling Sp carriage due to PCV7 serotype disappearance with persistence
of 19F and no ongoing net replacement after several years of PCV7 use and slowly rising uptake.
Description
Keywords
Streptococcus pneumoniae Nasopharyngeal colonisation Replacement Serotype 19F
Citation
Publisher
Elsevier