尼泊尔引入10价肺炎球菌结合疫苗4年后的效果:一项观察性队列研究

Shrijana Shrestha, Meeru Gurung, Puja Amatya, Sanjeev Bijukchhe, Anindya Sekhar Bose, Michael J Carter, Madhav C Gautam, Sunaina Gurung, Jason Hinds, Rama Kandasamy, Sarah Kelly, Bibek Khadka, Pratistha Maskey, Yama F Mujadidi, Peter J O'Reilly, Bhishma Pokhrel, Rahul Pradhan, Ganesh P Shah, Sonu Shrestha, Brian Wahl, Katherine L O'Brien, Maria Deloria Knoll, David R Murdoch, Dominic F Kelly, Stephen Thorson, Merryn Voysey, Andrew J Pollard
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在尼泊尔,肺炎链球菌(肺炎球菌)是儿童细菌性肺炎的常见病因,是一个主要的健康问题。在这种情况下,关于接种疫苗对疾病或肺炎球菌在儿童鼻咽部定植的影响的数据很少。尼泊尔于2015年将10价肺炎球菌结合疫苗(PCV10)纳入婴儿常规免疫接种计划。我们的目的是调查引入PCV10对尼泊尔儿童肺炎球菌携带和疾病的影响。方法:我们对尼泊尔的儿童进行了一项观察性队列研究。医院监测研究在加德满都的帕坦医院进行,健康儿童的社区研究在加德满都和奥卡尔登加区进行。在监测研究中,所有2014年3月20日至2019年12月31日期间入住帕坦医院的2个月至14岁的临床疑似肺炎儿童均符合入组条件。在社区研究中,从加德满都招募0-8周、6-23个月和24-59个月的健康儿童,从奥卡尔登加招募6-23个月的健康儿童。我们通过监测疫苗引入前1.5年和疫苗引入后4.5年的鼻咽部定植、肺炎和侵袭性细菌性疾病来评估PCV10引入的规划效果。在监测研究中,对帕坦医院疑似肺炎或侵袭性细菌疾病的儿童进行鼻咽拭子、血培养和胸部x线片检查。在社区研究中,从城市和农村环境中的健康儿童中获得鼻咽拭子。使用对数二项模型和调整患病率(aPR)对将疫苗引入国家规划后的每个日历年与疫苗接种前时期(2014- 2015年)进行比较,并根据日历月、年龄和性别进行调整,分析肺炎结局。研究结果:在2014年3月20日至2019年12月31日期间,我们招募了2051名疑似肺炎儿童和11354名健康儿童(8483名6-23个月儿童,761名24-59个月儿童和2110名0-8周儿童)来评估鼻咽定植。在2岁以下的临床肺炎病例中,到2019年,疫苗血清型携带率下降了82% (aPR 0.18 [95% CI 0.07 - 0.50])。在未接种疫苗的老年年龄组中,疫苗血清型携带率没有下降。到2019年,由于血清型19A和3的增加,PCV13携带的额外血清型增加了2.2倍(aPR为2.17 [95% CI为1.16 - 4.05])。健康儿童6-23月龄疫苗血清型携带率下降75% (aPR 0.25 [95% CI 0.19 - 0.33]), 24-59月龄无下降(aPR 0.59[0.29 -1·19])。在尚未接种疫苗的8周以下儿童中,到2019年,总体疫苗血清型携带量减少61% (aPR 0.39 [95% CI 0.18 - 0.85])。在引入血清3型和19A型PCV10后,6-23月龄儿童携带额外的PCV13血清型增加,但对血清6A型没有增加。胸片上终末巩固的临床肺炎病例比例从疫苗接种前的41%降至2018年的25%,但在2019年再次上升至36%。解释:尼泊尔将PCV10疫苗引入常规免疫规划,减少了健康儿童和2岁以下肺炎儿童的疫苗血清型携带。血清型19A和3的增加突出了继续监测以监测疫苗规划效果的重要性。该分析表明,在无法进行肺炎球菌疾病终点有效性研究的情况下,评估疫苗效果的方法是可靠的。资助:全球疫苗免疫联盟、疫苗联盟和世界卫生组织。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effect of the of 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in Nepal 4 years after introduction: an observational cohort study.

Background: In Nepal, Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus) is a common cause of bacterial pneumonia in children, and is a major health concern. There are few data on the effect of vaccination on the disease or colonisation with pneumococci in the nasopharynx of children in this setting. The 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV10) was introduced into the routine infant immunisation schedule in Nepal in 2015. We aimed to investigate the effect of the introduction of PCV10 on pneumococcal carriage and disease in children in Nepal.

Methods: We did an observational cohort study in children in Nepal. The hospital surveillance study took place in Patan Hospital, Kathmandu, and community studies in healthy children took place in Kathmandu and Okhaldhunga district. For the surveillance study, all children admitted to Patan Hospital between March 20, 2014, and Dec 31, 2019, aged between 2 months and 14 years with clinician-suspected pneumonia, were eligible for enrolment. For the community study, healthy children aged 0-8 weeks, 6-23 months, and 24-59 months were recruited from Kathmandu, and healthy children aged 6-23 months were recruited from Okhaldhunga. We assessed the programmatic effect of PCV10 introduction using surveillance for nasopharyngeal colonisation, pneumonia, and invasive bacterial disease from 1·5 years before vaccine introduction and 4·5 years after vaccine introduction. For the surveillance study, nasopharyngeal swabs, blood cultures, and chest radiographs were obtained from children admitted to Patan Hospital with suspected pneumonia or invasive bacterial disease. For the community study, nasopharyngeal swabs were obtained from healthy children in the urban and rural settings. Pneumonia outcomes were analysed using log-binomial models and adjusted prevalence ratios (aPR) comparing each calendar year after the introduction of the vaccine into the national programme with the pre-vaccine period (2014-15), adjusted for calendar month, age, and sex.

Findings: Between March 20, 2014, and Dec 31, 2019, we enrolled 2051 children with suspected pneumonia, and 11 354 healthy children (8483 children aged 6-23 months, 761 aged 24-59 months, and 2110 aged 0-8 weeks) to assess nasopharyngeal colonisation. Among clinical pneumonia cases younger than 2 years, vaccine serotype carriage declined 82% (aPR 0·18 [95% CI 0·07-0·50]) by 2019. There was no decrease in vaccine serotype carriage in cases among older unvaccinated age groups. Carriage of the additional serotypes in PCV13 was 2·2 times higher by 2019 (aPR 2·17 [95% CI 1·16-4·05]), due to increases in serotypes 19A and 3. Vaccine serotype carriage in healthy children declined by 75% in those aged 6-23 months (aPR 0·25 [95% CI 0·19-0·33]) but not in those aged 24-59 months (aPR 0·59 [0·29-1·19]). A decrease in overall vaccine serotype carriage of 61% by 2019 (aPR 0·39 [95% CI 0·18-0·85]) was also observed in children younger than 8 weeks who were not yet immunised. Carriage of the additional PCV13 serotypes in children aged 6-23 months increased after PCV10 introduction for serotype 3 and 19A, but not for serotype 6A. The proportion of clinical pneumonia cases with endpoint consolidation on chest radiographs declined from 41% in the pre-vaccine period to 25% by 2018, but rose again in 2019 to 36%.

Interpretation: The introduction of the PCV10 vaccine into the routine immunisation programme in Nepal has reduced vaccine serotype carriage in both healthy children and children younger than 2 years with pneumonia. Increases in serotypes 19A and 3 highlight the importance of continued surveillance to monitor the effect of vaccine programmes. This analysis demonstrates a robust approach to assessing vaccine effect in situations in which pneumococcal disease endpoint effectiveness studies are not possible.

Funding: Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance and the World Health Organization.

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