Abstract
BackgroundPneumococcal diseases remain a leading cause of vaccine-preventable death worldwide in children <5 years of age. The seven-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7) was approved in 2001 in Europe and was introduced into the national immunization programmes of many European countries from 2006–2008. In 2009, higher-valent PCVs (PCV10 and PCV13) became available, replacing PCV7 from 2009–2011. This article describes the evolution of vaccine and non-vaccine serotypes causing invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) following the introduction of PCVs in Western Europe, based on data from publicly-available medical publications and national surveillance systems from January 2010 to May 2015.DiscussionIn countries with high vaccine uptake, 5–7 years after PCV7 introduction IPD caused by vaccine serotypes has almost disappeared in children. Non-PCV7 serotypes have emerged, particularly serotypes 19A, 7 F, 3 and 1. A rapid and significant reduction of the additional serotypes included in higher-valent vaccines has been observed consistently following the introduction of these vaccines. A significant and rapid decline of serotypes 19A, 7 F, 1 and 6A in both vaccine-eligible and older age groups has been observed in countries using PCV13 while serotype 19A and 3 has increased in countries using PCV10. Serotype 3 has become one of the most prevalent serotypes in adults, with some reduction only in the UK and France. Serotype diversity increased and varied by age group, the type of vaccine in use, and the time since the introduction of higher-valent PCVs. Serotypes that are currently more frequent include 24 F, 22 F, 8 and 15A in countries that use PCV13, and serotypes 19A and 3 in countries that use PCV10. Compared with the time before the introduction of higher valent PCVs, to date, there is no single ‘19A-like’ serotype emerging across countries and most of the newly emerging non-PCV13 vaccine types are less invasive with a low case-carrier ratio.ConclusionsIt is important to closely monitor not only evolving serotypes but also the magnitude of the effect in order to evaluate the overall impact of pneumococcal vaccination programmes and to initiate the appropriate vaccination strategy. Emerging serotypes may also need to be considered for the future development of new vaccines.
Highlights
Introduction of7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7) into National immunization programme (NIP) in 2006 led to a major decrease in invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) due to PCV7 serotypes vaccine-type from 7.4 per 100,000 per year in 2004–2006 to less than 1 per 100,000 per year in 2012–2014 [40]
It is important to closely monitor evolving serotypes and the magnitude of the effect in order to evaluate the overall impact of pneumococcal vaccination programmes and to initiate the appropriate vaccination strategy
In 2013, 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13) serotypes accounted for 36 % of IPD cases and serotypes 19A, 1 and 7 F accounted for 29 % of all IPD cases
Summary
Countries in which only PCV13 is used Belgium PCV7 was introduced into the NIP in January 2007 with a 2 + 1 schedule and was replaced by PCV13 in July 2011. In children 64 years of age remained unchanged at 30–33/100,000 population due to an increase in nonPCV10-serotype IPD despite a significant reduction in PCV10-serotype IPD in all ages (Table 1) [39]. Compared with the period following the introduction of PCV7, serotype 3 increased in children, albeit in very small numbers, and decreased in adults >16 years of age. In 2009 (before the introduction of higher-valent PCVs), PCV13 serotypes accounted for 84 % of all IPD cases in children
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