Pneumococcal carriage among indigenous Warao children in Venezuela: Serotypes, susceptibility patterns, and molecular epidemiology

被引:29
|
作者
Rivera-Olivero, Ismar A.
Bogaert, Debby
Bello, Teresita
del Nogal, Berenice
Sluijter, Marcel
Hermans, Peter W. M.
de Waard, Jacobus H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Hosp Vargas Caracas, Inst Biomed, Lab TB, Caracas, Venezuela
[2] Hosp Ninos JM de Los Rios, Dept Pediat, Caracas, Venezuela
[3] Erasmus MC Sophia, Dept Pediat, Rotterdam, Netherlands
[4] Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Nijmegen Med Ctr, Dept Pediat, Nijmegen, Netherlands
[5] Harvard Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Boston, MA 02115 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1086/522984
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Little attention has been paid to pneumococcal carriage and disease in Amerindians from Latin America. The Warao people, an indigenous population from Venezuela, live in the delta of the Orinoco River in geographically isolated communities with difficult access to medical care. To obtain insight into pneumococcal carriage and the theoretical coverage of pneumococcal vaccines in this population, we investigated pneumococcal colonization, serotype, and genotype distribution among Warao children in 9 distinct, geographically isolated communities in the Delta Amacuro area in the northeast of Venezuela. From April 2004 through January 2005, a total of 161 Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates were recovered from single nasopharyngeal swab samples obtained from 356 children aged 0-72 months. The overall pneumococcal carriage rate was 49%, ranging from 13% to 76%, depending on the community investigated and the age of the children (50% among children aged <2 years and 25% among children aged <2 years). The most frequent serotypes were 23F (19.5% of isolates), 6A (19.5%), 15B (10.4%), 6B (9.1%), and 19F (7.2%). The theoretical coverage of the 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, including the crossreactive nonvaccine serotype 6A, was 65%. A total of 26% of the isolates were resistant to first-line antibiotics, with 70% of these strains being covered by the 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine. Restriction fragment end labelling analysis revealed 65 different genotypes, with 125 (80%) of the isolates belonging to 27 different genetic clusters, suggesting a high degree of horizontal spread of pneumococcal strains in and between the villages. The high colonization rates and high (registered) acute respiratory tract infection morbidity and mortality in this part of Venezuela suggest that Warao children are at increased risk for pneumococcal disease and, therefore, benefit from vaccination.
引用
收藏
页码:1427 / 1434
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Non-vaccine Pneumococcal Serotypes Among Children with Invasive Pneumococcal Disease
    James John
    Rosemol Varghese
    Jones Lionell
    Ayyanraj Neeravi
    Balaji Veeraraghavan
    Indian Pediatrics, 2018, 55 : 874 - 876
  • [22] 24-Locus MIRU-VNTR genotyping is a useful tool to study the molecular epidemiology of tuberculosis among Warao Amerindians in Venezuela
    Maes, Mailis
    Kremer, Kristin
    van Soolingen, Dick
    Takiff, Howard
    de Waard, Jacobus H.
    TUBERCULOSIS, 2008, 88 (05) : 490 - 494
  • [23] Serotype Patterns of Pneumococcal Disease in Adults Are Correlated With Carriage Patterns in Older Children
    Wyllie, Anne L.
    Warren, Joshua L.
    Regev-Yochay, Gili
    Givon-Lavi, Noga
    Dagan, Ron
    Weinberger, Daniel M.
    CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2021, 72 (11) : E768 - E775
  • [24] Pneumococcal carriage in mothers and children of the Panare Amerindians from the State of Bolivar, Venezuela.
    Bello Gonzalez, T.
    Rivera-Olivero, I. A.
    Pocaterra, L.
    Spadola, E.
    Araque, M.
    Hermans, P. W. M.
    De Waard, J. H.
    REVISTA ARGENTINA DE MICROBIOLOGIA, 2010, 42 (01): : 30 - 34
  • [25] Pneumococcal carriage among HIV infected children in Accra, Ghana
    Donkor, Eric S.
    Annan, Jennifer A.
    Badoe, Ebenezer V.
    Dayie, Nicholas T. K. D.
    Labi, Appiah-Korang
    Slotved, Hans-Christian
    BMC INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2017, 17
  • [26] Pneumococcal carriage among HIV infected children in Accra, Ghana
    Eric S. Donkor
    Jennifer A. Annan
    Ebenezer V. Badoe
    Nicholas T. K. D. Dayie
    Appiah-Korang Labi
    Hans-Christian Slotved
    BMC Infectious Diseases, 17
  • [27] Routine Pneumococcal Vaccination of Children Provokes New Patterns of Serotypes Causing Invasive Pneumococcal Disease in Adults and Children
    Norton, Nancy B.
    Stanek, Ronald J.
    Mufson, Maurice A.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES, 2013, 345 (02): : 112 - 120
  • [28] Epidemiology of pneumococcal carriage in children under five years of age in Accra, Ghana
    Mills, Richael Odarkor
    Twum-Danso, Kingsley
    Owusu-Agyei, Seth
    Donkor, Eric S.
    INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2015, 47 (05) : 326 - 331
  • [29] In-depth analysis of pneumococcal serotypes in Belgian children (2015-2018): Diversity, invasive disease potential, and antimicrobial susceptibility in carriage and disease
    Desmet, Stefanie
    Wouters, Ine
    Van Heirstraeten, Liesbet
    Beutels, Philippe
    Van Damme, Pierre
    Malhotra-Kumar, Surbhi
    Maes, Piet
    Verhaegen, Jan
    Peetermans, Willy E.
    Lagrou, Katrien
    Theeten, Heidi
    VACCINE, 2021, 39 (02) : 372 - 379
  • [30] Pneumococcal nasopharyngeal carriage and patterns of penicillin resistance in young children in Fiji
    Russell, F. M.
    Carapetis, J. R.
    Ketaiwai, S.
    Kunabuli, V.
    Taoi, M.
    Biribo, S.
    Seduadua, A.
    Mulholland, E. K.
    ANNALS OF TROPICAL PAEDIATRICS, 2006, 26 (03): : 187 - 197