Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Impact of the Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine and Antibiotic Use on Nasopharyngeal Colonization by Antibiotic Nonsusceptible Streptococcus pneumoniae - Alaska, 2000-2010

Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2015 Jul 29. [Epub ahead of print]
Impact of the Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine and Antibiotic Use on Nasopharyngeal Colonization by Antibiotic Nonsusceptible Streptococcus pneumoniae - Alaska, 2000-2010.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND:
We describe the relative impact of the heptavalent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7, introduced 2001) and antibiotic use on colonization by antibiotic resistant pneumococci in urban Alaskan children during 2000-2010.
METHODS:
We obtained nasopharyngeal swab specimens from a convenience sample of children aged <5 years at clinics annually during 2000-2004 and 2008-2010. PCV7 status and antibiotic use <90days before enrollment was determined by interview/medical records review.Pneumococci were characterized by serotype and susceptibility to penicillin (PCN). Isolates with full PCN resistance (PCN-R) or intermediate PCN resistance (PCN-I) were classified as PCN-NS.
RESULTS:
We recruited 3,496 children (median: 452/year). During 2000-2010, a range of 18-29%/year of children used PCN/amoxicillin (p-value for trend [p] = 0.09); the proportion age-appropriately vaccinated with PCV7 increased (0%-90%; p <0.01). Among pneumococcal isolates, the PCV7-serotype proportion decreased (53%-<1%; p <0.01) and non-PCV7-serotype proportion increased (43%-95%; p <0.01). PCN-R pneumococcal colonizationprevalence decreased (23%-9%, p <0.01) and PCN-I pneumococcal colonization prevalence increased (13%-24%, p <0.01); overall PCN-NS pneumococcalcolonizationprevalence was unchanged. PCN-NS among colonizing PCV7-type and non-PCV7-type pneumococci remained unchanged; a mean of 31%/year of PCV7-type and 10%/year of non-PCV7-type isolates were PCN-R, and 10%/year of PCV7 and 20%/year of non-PCV7-type isolates were PCN-I.
CONCLUSIONS:
Overall PCN-NS pneumococcal colonization remained unchanged during 2000-2010 because increased colonization by predominantly PCN-I non-PCV7 serotypes offset decreased colonization by predominantly PCN-R PCV7 serotypes. Proportion PCN-NS did not increase within colonizing pneumococcal serotype-groups (PCV7 versus non-PCV7) despite stable penicillin use in our population.
PMID: 26226443 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]


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