Abstract

Streptococcus pneumoniae is the leading cause of vaccine-preventable death in children <5 years of age globally. We determined incidence rates of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD), clinical and chest X-ray-confirmed pneumonia (CXR+Pn), S. pneumoniae serotype distribution, and antimicrobial susceptibility in children in Goiânia, Brazil. Prospective, population-based surveillance was conducted from May 2007 to May 2009 in children 28 days to <36 months of age presenting to all 33 pediatric healthcare services (outpatient departments, emergency rooms, hospitals) in Goiânia. Eligibility criteria were temperature ≥39.0 °C in the previous 24h and/or clinical suspicion of pneumonia or IPD. 14,509 subjects were enrolled. Median age was 14.0 months. S. pneumoniae was detected in 64 samples from 62 subjects: 58 (90.6%) blood; 4 (6.3%) cerebrospinal fluid; and 2 (3.1%) pleural fluid. Incidence rate of IPD (culture- and polymerase chain reaction-positive) for all children aged 28 days to <36 months was 57.5/100,000; overall incidence for culture-positive only was 54.9/100,000. Age stratification of culture-positive-only subjects found the highest rates were, 114.6/100,000 and 69.8/100,000, respectively, for the 6 months to <12 months and 12 months to <24 months age groups. The overall incidence of invasive pneumonia and pneumococcal meningitis was 37.2/100,000 and 5.3/100,000, respectively. The most common IPD serotypes were 14 (45.0%), 6B (13.3%), 18C (6.7%), and 23F (5.0%). Eight isolates (13.3%) were penicillin nonsusceptible. The cumulative percentages of serotypes included in 7-valent, 10-valent, and 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccines were 78.3%, 80.0%, and 88.3%, respectively. The overall incidence of clinical pneumonia and CXR+Pn was, 9598/100,000 and 3428/100,000, respectively. CXR+Pn rates for hospitalized and non-hospitalized subjects were 1751/100,000 and 1677/100,000, respectively. The burden of IPD and pneumonia is considerable in children in a large Brazilian city, and is seen in hospitalized as well as ambulatory subjects. Vaccination with pneumococcal conjugate vaccines has the potential to decrease this burden.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call