Abstract

Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCV) were introduced into the Israeli national immunization plan starting with the heptavalent PCV7 in 2009 and then PCV13 in the late 2010. The objective of this study was to determine the vaccines' impact on hospitalization rates for community-acquired pneumonia on the severity of the pneumonia episodes and upon pneumococcal serotype distribution. We retrospectively reviewed all children hospitalized in our institution with pneumonia, aged between 1 and 16years, between the years 2006 and 2015. Demographic, clinical, and laboratory data between three time periods: pre-PCV, PCV7, and PCV13, were compared. During the study period, 1375 children were hospitalized with pneumonia. A gradual decline in hospitalization rates due to pneumonia was observed starting in 2006 in the pre-PCV period and continued until after the introduction of PCV13. A similar trend was observed in pneumonias with a culture positive for S. pneumoniae. Pleural effusion was observed in 24% of all pneumonias, and this percentage was stable throughout the study period. The average age at hospitalization increased during the study period, as did the average duration of hospital stay. Pneumococcal serotypes included in the vaccine were isolated less frequently during the study and non-vaccine serotypes tended to appear more frequently. Pediatric pneumonia hospitalization rates continued to decline since the introduction of PCV without increasing the frequency of complications. Pneumococcal serotype distribution shifted in parallel. Our findings confirm the efficacy of PCV and support the evidence to include more serotypes in the next generation of PCV.

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