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Journal ArticleDOI

Herd immunity and serotype replacement 4 years after seven-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccination in England and Wales: an observational cohort study

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TLDR
Despite much serotype replacement, a substantial reduction in invasive pneumococcal disease in young children can be achieved with PCV7 vaccination, with some indirect benefit in older age groups.
Abstract
Summary Background The seven-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7) has reduced vaccine-type (VT) invasive pneumococcal disease but increases in non-vaccine-type (NVT) disease have varied between countries. We assess the effect of the PCV7 vaccination on VT and NVT disease in England and Wales. Methods The study cohort was the population of England and Wales from July, 2000, to June, 2010. We calculated incidence rate ratios (IRRs) to compare incidences of VT and NVT disease before (2000–06) and after (2009–10) the introduction of PCV7. We used data from the national surveillance database. Cases included in our analysis were restricted to those confirmed by culture linked with isolates referred for serotyping at the national reference centre by laboratories in England and Wales. We adjusted for potential bias from missing data (serotype and age of patient) and changes in case ascertainment rates during the study period. Findings 5809 cases of invasive pneumococcal disease were reported in 2009–10, giving an incidence of 10·6 per 100 000 population in 2009–10, which, when compared with the adjusted average annual incidence of 16·1 in 2000–06, gives an overall reduction of 34% (95% CI 28–39). VT disease decreased in all age groups, with reductions of 98% in individuals younger than 2 years and 81% in those aged 65 years or older. NVT disease increased by 68% in individuals younger than 2 years and 48% in those aged 65 years or older, giving an overall reduction in invasive pneumococcal disease of 56% in those younger than 2 years and 19% in those aged 65 years or older. After vaccine introduction, more NVT serotypes increased in frequency than decreased, which is consistent with vaccine-induced replacement. Key serotypes showing replacement were 7F, 19A, and 22F. Increases in NVT invasive pneumococcal disease were not associated with antimicrobial resistance. Interpretation Despite much serotype replacement, a substantial reduction in invasive pneumococcal disease in young children can be achieved with PCV7 vaccination, with some indirect benefit in older age groups. Further reductions should be achievable by use of higher valency vaccines. Robust surveillance data are needed to properly assess the epidemiological effect of multivalent pneumococcal disease vaccines. Funding Health Protection Agency.

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Citations
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Effectiveness of 2+1 PCV7 vaccination schedules in children under 2 years: a meta-analysis of impact studies.

TL;DR: A systematic, literature review and meta-analysis on IRR studies on reductions of the IPD, incidence in children <2 years of age suggested high effectiveness of the 2+1 vaccination schedule for PCV 7.
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Investigation of Antibiotic Resistance, Serotype Distribution, and Genetic Characteristics of 164 Invasive Streptococcus pneumoniae from North China Between April 2016 and October 2017.

TL;DR: All the invasive S. pneumoniae isolates demonstrated high resistance to antibiotics, and the coverage of S. coli pneumoniae vaccine was higher in children than in adults.
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Pneumococcal conjugate vaccination: correlates of protection

TL;DR: The technical expertise is available to aid the engineering of vaccine strains to induce the desired post-vaccination immune-mediated response, with the assessment of the knife-edge balance between successful protection from wild d Dengue virus infection or the exacerbation of dengue disease as the intellectual and scientifi c challenge ahead.
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Changing Epidemiology of Pneumococcal Disease in the Era of Conjugate Vaccines

TL;DR: Conjugate vaccines were first licensed in 2000 for use in young children; second generation conjugates covering more serotypes became available in 2009 and are now part of the routine infant immunization programs of most countries around the world.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Serotype replacement in disease after pneumococcal vaccination

TL;DR: The magnitude of serotype replacement in disease can be attributed, in part, to a combination of lower invasiveness of the replacing serotypes, biases in the pre-vaccine carriage data (unmasking), and bias in the disease surveillance systems that could underestimate the true amount of replacement.
Journal ArticleDOI

BSAC standardized disc susceptibility testing method (version 7)

TL;DR: There have been considerable changes to the format of the recommendations since the previous version (version 7); the majority of the footnotes to the tables have been removed and the notations added to the end column; it is hoped that this change will avoid confusion in interpretation.
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