Impact of pneumococcal conjugate vaccines on invasive pneumococcal disease-causing lineages among South African children.

Journal: Nature Communications
Published:
Abstract

Invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) due to non-vaccine serotypes after the introduction of pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCV) remains a global concern. This study used pathogen genomics to evaluate changes in invasive pneumococcal lineages before, during and after vaccine introduction in South Africa. We included genomes (N = 3104) of IPD isolates from individuals aged <18 years (2005-20), spanning four periods: pre-PCV, PCV7, early-PCV13, and late-PCV13. Significant incidence reductions occurred among vaccine-type lineages in the late-PCV13 period compared to the pre-PCV period. However, some vaccine-type lineages continued to cause invasive disease and showed increasing effective population size trends in the post-PCV era. A significant increase in lineage diversity was observed from the PCV7 period to the early-PCV13 period (Simpson's diversity index: 0.954, 95% confidence interval 0.948-0.961 vs 0.965, 0.962-0.969) supporting intervention-driven population structure perturbation. Increases in the prevalence of penicillin, erythromycin, and multidrug resistance were observed among non-vaccine serotypes in the late-PCV13 period compared to the pre-PCV period. In this work we highlight the importance of continued genomic surveillance to monitor disease-causing lineages post vaccination to support policy-making and future vaccine designs and considerations.

Authors
Cebile Lekhuleni, Kedibone Ndlangisa, Rebecca Gladstone, Sopio Chochua, Benjamin Metcalf, Yuan Li, Jackie Kleynhans, Linda De Gouveia, Scott Hazelhurst, Ana D Ferreira, Happy Skosana, Sibongile Walaza, Vanessa Quan, Susan Meiring, Paulina Hawkins, Lesley Mcgee, Stephen Bentley, Cheryl Cohen, Stephanie Lo, Anne Von Gottberg, Mignon Du Plessis
Relevant Conditions

Strep Throat