Emerging Infectious Diseases (Mar 2004)

Correlating Epidemiologic Trends with the Genotypes Causing Meningococcal Disease, Maryland

  • M. Catherine McEllistrem,
  • John A. Kolano,
  • Margaret A. Pass,
  • Dominique A. Caugant,
  • Aaron B. Mendelsohn,
  • Antonio Guilherme Fonseca Pacheco,
  • Jafar Razeq,
  • Lee H. Harrison

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1003.020611
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
pp. 451 – 456

Abstract

Read online

Epidemic meningococcal infection is generally caused by single clones; whether nonepidemic increases in infection are clonal is unknown. We studied the molecular epidemiology of meningococcal infection during a period that the incidence increased in two age groups. Serogroup C and Y meningococcal isolates were analyzed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and multilocus sequence typing. From 1992 to 1999, 96.4% (27/28) of serogroup C isolates from persons 15–24 years of age were in clonal group 1, compared with 65.6% (21/32) of isolates from persons ≤14 years, and 64.3% (9/14) of isolates from adults ≥25 years (p ≤ 0.01). The proportion of clonal group 2 serogroup Y strains increased from 7.7% (1/13) in 1992 to 1993 to 52.0% (13/25) in 1998 to 1999 (p < 0.01). The nonepidemic age-specific increases in serogroup C meningococcal infection in Maryland were clonal in nature and the changes in serogroup Y incidence were associated with a shift in the genotypes of strains causing invasive disease.

Keywords