Serotype 3 invasive pneumococcal disease in Tuscany across the eras of conjugate vaccines (2005-2024) and anthropic-driven respiratory virus fluctuations.
Serotype 3 Streptococcus pneumoniae (ser3) has emerged as a leading cause of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) despite targeted vaccination efforts. Preliminary evidence reported a differential impact of anti-ser3-pneumococcal-conjugate-vaccines (PCVser3) on different clinical presentations of ser3-IPD. Recently, a temporal association between respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and IPD was observed in children, supporting a role of RSV in driving IPD dynamics. Ser3 IPD cases occurred in Tuscany from November 2005 to March 2024 were included. Comparisons of different clinical presentations (bacteremic pneumonias and osteomyelitis versus sepsis and meningitis) were made between younger and older patients and between vaccinated and unvaccinated ones. The temporal correlation between ser3 IPD, RSV and influenza was qualitatively described from 2015/2016 to 2023/2024. Among 160 ser3 IPD recorded cases, fully-immunized patients showed a significantly lower proportion of sepsis and meningitis compared to non-immunized patients (all ages: 7.5% versus 58.5%, p < .0001; aged 14-years and younger: 0% versus 31.3%, p = .0019). Ser3 IPD showed a strong temporal association with influenza virus outbreak but not with isolated RSV outbreak. Nearly two decades of molecular surveillance of ser3 in Tuscany suggest that the most severe IPD presentations, such as sepsis and meningitis, are significantly lower in individuals who received PCVser3 immunization. Ser3 IPD incidence is temporally associated with influenza outbreaks but not with RSV.