Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate H. influenzae epidemiology in the Republic of Ireland. We performed serotyping, multi-locus sequence typing (MLST) and susceptibility testing on H. influenzae isolates received by the Irish Meningitis and Sepsis Reference Laboratory from 2010 to 2018. Three hundred sixty-seven invasive and 41 non-invasive infection (NII) isolates were received. Invasive isolates were mostly recovered from paediatric (21%) and elderly (42%) populations. Invasive disease was more prevalent in females of childbearing age (72%) compared with males the same age (28%). Non-typeable H. influenzae (NTHi) predominated among invasive (83%) and NII (95%). Invasive Hib disease isolates were infrequent (4%, n =15). Among invasive disease, Hif was the commonest encapsulated serotype (10%, n =37), and the only encapsulated serotype detected in NII (5%, 2/41). The first PCR-confirmed serotypes d and a in Ireland were characterised among invasive disease in 2017 and 2018, respectively. MLST revealed a diverse NTHi population, while encapsulated serotypes were clonal. Sequence type (ST) 103 (n =14) occurred exclusively in invasive NTHi disease. Ampicillin resistance (AmpR) was 18% among invasive isolates and 22% in NII. β-Lactamase production was the main source of ampicillin resistance in invasive and NII isolates. We detected β-lactamase negative ampicillin resistance (BLNAR) among invasive isolates. We report an NTHi fluoroquinolone-resistant clone: ST1524 among invasive (n =2) and NII isolates (n =2). The Hib vaccine has positively impacted on Hib disease in Ireland, given the low frequency of Hib. The dominance of NTHi, emergence of serotypes a and d and BLNAR suggest a changing H. influenzae epidemiology in Ireland.

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