Abstract

BackgroundPneumococcal vaccine immunizations may be responsible for alterations in serotype epidemiology within a region. This study investigated the pneumococcal carriage prevalence and the impact of the 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV-13) on circulating serotypes among healthy children in Northern Ghana.MethodsThis was a cross sectional study conducted in the Kassena-Nankana districts of Northern Ghana from November to December during the dry season of 2018. Nasopharyngeal swabs collected from 193 participants were cultured per standard microbiological protocols and pneumococcal isolates were serotyped using the latex agglutination technique and the capsular Quellung reaction test. We examined for any association between the demographic characteristics of study participants and pneumococcal carriage using chi-square test and logistic regression.ResultsOf the 193 participants that were enrolled the mean age was 8.6 years and 54.4% were females. The carriage rate among the participants was 32.6% (63/193), and twenty different serotypes were identified. These included both vaccine serotypes (VT), 35% (7/20) and non-vaccine serotypes (NVT), 65% (13/20). The predominant serotypes (34 and 11A), both of which were NVT, accounted for a prevalence of 12.8%. PCV-13 covered only 35% of serotypes identified whiles 40% of serotypes are covered by PPV 23.ConclusionPost-vaccination carriage of S. pneumoniae is high and is dominated by non-vaccine serotypes. There is therefore a need for the conduct of invasive pneumococcal disease surveillance (IPD) to find out if the high non-vaccine serotype carriage translates to disease. And in addition, a review of the currently used PCV-13 vaccine in the country would be considered relevant.

Highlights

  • Pneumococcal vaccine immunizations may be responsible for alterations in serotype epidemiology within a region

  • This study aimed at investigating the rate of nasopharyngeal carriage of S. pneumoniae and the serotypes circulating among school-aged children aged 5 to 12 years in the Kassena-Nankana districts of Ghana

  • Study site The study was conducted in the Kassena–Nankana Districts (KND) of Northern Ghana, which is predominantly characterized by arid climatic conditions with a population of 165,000 and population density of 91.5km2 [25]

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Summary

Introduction

Pneumococcal vaccine immunizations may be responsible for alterations in serotype epidemiology within a region. This study investigated the pneumococcal carriage prevalence and the impact of the 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV-13) on circulating serotypes among healthy children in Northern Ghana. An average of 800,000 deaths are reported among children due to invasive pneumococcal diseases with considerable proportions occurring in developing countries [3, 4]. An estimated 50% of all pneumococcal deaths reported in 2015 occurred in developing countries [5]. Up to 100 pneumococcal serotypes has been described [7], from which an average of 20 serotypes are reported to be commonly associated with juvenal invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD), namely 19A, 3, 7F, 23F, 11, 6A, 6B, 14, 8, 18C and 19F [2, 8]

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