PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Initial effects of the National PCV7 Childhood Immunization Program on adult invasive pneumococcal disease in Israel.

  • Gili Regev-Yochay,
  • Galia Rahav,
  • Klaris Riesenberg,
  • Yonit Wiener-Well,
  • Jacob Strahilevitz,
  • Michal Stein,
  • Daniel Glikman,
  • Gabriel Weber,
  • Israel Potasman,
  • Ron Dagan,
  • IAIPD study group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088406
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
p. e88406

Abstract

Read online

BACKGROUND: PCV7 was introduced as universal childhood vaccination in Israel in July 2009 and PCV13 in November 2010. Here we report data on adult invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD), two years post PCV7 implementation and before an expected effect of PCV13. METHODS: An ongoing nationwide active-surveillance (all 27 laboratories performing blood cultures in Israel), providing all blood & CSF S. pneumoniae isolates from persons >18 y was initiated in July 2009. Capture-recapture method assured reporting of >95% cases. All isolates were serotyped in one central laboratory. IPD outcome and medical history were recorded in 90%. Second year post PCV implementation is compared to the first year. RESULTS: During July 2009 to June 2011, 970 IPD cases were reported (annual incidence [/100,000] of 9.17 and 10.16 in the two consecutive years, respectively). Respective case fatality rates (CFRs) were 20% and 19.1%. Incidence of IPD and CFR increased with age and number of comorbidities. Incidence rate was significantly greater during the second winter, 7.79/100,000 vs. 6.14/100,000 in first winter, p = 0.004, with a non-significant decrease during summer months (3.02 to 2.48/100,000). The proportion of IPD cases due to PCV7-serotypes decreased from 27.5% to 13.1% (first to second year) (p64 y). Among younger/healthier patients serotype 5 was the major increasing serotype. Penicillin and ceftriaxone resistance decreased significantly in the second year. CONCLUSIONS: While overall annual incidence of IPD did not change, the indirect effect of PCV7 vaccination was evident by the significant decrease in PCV7 serotypes across all age groups. Increase in non-VT13 strains was significant in immunocompromised patients. A longer follow-up is required to appreciate the full effect of infant vaccination on annual IPD.