Long-term impact of pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccination on nasopharyngeal carriage in children following a reduced dose pneumococcal conjugate vaccine primary series in infancy
Previously, the Fiji Pneumococcal Project (FiPP) evaluated reduced dose immunization schedules that incorporated pneumococcal protein conjugate and/or polysaccharide vaccine (PCV7 and 23vPPV, respectively). Immune hyporesponsiveness was observed in children vaccinated with 23vPPV at 12 months of age...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Vaccine 2015-07, Vol.33 (42), p.5708-5714 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Previously, the Fiji Pneumococcal Project (FiPP) evaluated reduced dose immunization schedules that incorporated pneumococcal protein conjugate and/or polysaccharide vaccine (PCV7 and 23vPPV, respectively). Immune hyporesponsiveness was observed in children vaccinated with 23vPPV at 12 months of age compared with children who did not receive 23vPPV.
Here we assess the long-term impact of 23vPPV vaccination on nasopharyngeal carriage rates and densities of
Streptococcus pneumoniae
,
Haemophilus influenzae
,
Staphylococcus aureus
and
Moraxella catarrhalis
. Nasopharyngeal swabs (n=194) were obtained from healthy children who participated in FiPP (now aged 5–7 years).
S. pneumoniae
were isolated and identified by standard culture-based methods, and serotyped using latex agglutination and the Quellung reaction. Carriage rates and densities of
S. pneumoniae
,
H. influenzae
,
S. aureus
and
M. catarrhalis
were determined using real-time quantitative PCR.
There were no differences in the rate or density of
S. pneumoniae
,
H. influenzae
or
M. catarrhalis
carriage by PCV7 dose or 23vPPV vaccination in the vaccinated participants overall. However, differences were observed between the two main ethnic groups: Fijian children of Indian descent (Indo-Fijian) were less likely to carry
S. pneumoniae
,
H. influenzae
and
M. catarrhalis
, and there was evidence of a higher carriage rate of
S. aureus
compared with indigenous Fijian (iTaukei) children. Polysaccharide vaccination appeared to have effects that varied between ethnic groups, with 23vPPV vaccination associated with a higher carriage rate of
S. aureus
in iTaukei children, while there was a lower carriage rate of
S. pneumoniae
associated with 23vPPV vaccination in Indo-Fijian children.
Overall, polysaccharide vaccination had no long-term impact on pneumococcal carriage, but may have impacted on
S. aureus
carriage and have varying effects in ethnic groups, suggesting current WHO vaccine schedule recommendations against the use of 23vPPV in children under two years of age are appropriate. |
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ISSN: | 0264-410X 1873-2518 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.07.059 |