Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jan 2023)

Seroepidemiology and Carriage of Diphtheria in Epidemic-Prone Area and Implications for Vaccination Policy, Vietnam

  • Noriko Kitamura,
  • Thanh T. Hoan,
  • Hung M. Do,
  • The A. Dao,
  • Lien T. Le,
  • Thao T.T. Le,
  • Thuy T.T. Doan,
  • Thuong N. Chau,
  • Hoi T. Dinh,
  • Masaaki Iwaki,
  • Mitsutoshi Senoh,
  • Androulla Efstraciou,
  • Nen M. Ho,
  • Duc M. Pham,
  • Duc-Anh Dang,
  • Michiko Toizumi,
  • Paul Fine,
  • Hung T. Do,
  • Lay-Myint Yoshida

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2901.220975
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 1
pp. 70 – 80

Abstract

Read online

In 2019, a community-based, cross-sectional carriage survey and a seroprevalence survey of 1,216 persons 1–55 years of age were conducted in rural Vietnam to investigate the mechanism of diphtheria outbreaks. Seroprevalence was further compared with that of an urban area that had no cases reported for the past decade. Carriage prevalence was 1.4%. The highest prevalence, 4.5%, was observed for children 1–5 years of age. Twenty-seven asymptomatic Coerynebacterium diphtheriae carriers were identified; 9 carriers had tox gene–bearing strains, and 3 had nontoxigenic tox gene–bearing strains. Child malnutrition was associated with low levels of diphtheria toxoid IgG, which might have subsequently increased child carriage prevalence. Different immunity patterns in the 2 populations suggested that the low immunity among children caused by low vaccination coverage increased transmission, resulting in symptomatic infections at school-going age, when vaccine-induced immunity waned most. A school-entry booster dose and improved infant vaccination coverage are recommended to control transmissions.

Keywords