From the Journals

PNSP rates did not increase after PCV13 introduction


 

FROM EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES

Streptococcus pneumoniae did not grow more resistant to penicillin after the introduction of 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, though geographic differences remained, according to Cheryl P. Andam, Ph.D., and her associates.

Data from the Active Bacterial Core surveillance system on 285 patients before introduction of PCV13 and from 339 patients after PCV13 introduction were used in the study. Patients were from California, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Maryland, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Tennessee. New Mexico, Maryland, and Georgia saw the largest increases in penicillin-nonsusceptible pneumococcus (PNSP) rates, while Colorado, New York, and Connecticut saw decreases. No change was seen in the nationwide PNSP rate.

Preintroduction of PCV13, geographic heterogeneity in serotype distribution, and serotype-specific differences in penicillin resistance were equally responsible for geographic variation in PNSP rates. Although no significant change was seen after introduction, influence of serotype-specific differences did decrease slightly while geographic heterogeneity of PSNP serotypes increased.

“Further long-term nationwide surveillance of serotype dynamics is required to assess the multiple ecologic factors that influence antibiotic resistance in the pneumococcus in the conjugate vaccine era,” the investigators concluded.

Find the full research letter in Emerging Infectious Diseases (doi: 10.3201/eid2306.161331).

Recommended Reading

Shingles vaccine deemed effective in people with autoimmune disease
MDedge Internal Medicine
Anthony Fauci faces the ‘perpetual challenge’ of emerging infections
MDedge Internal Medicine
Make assessment of immunization status of older adults routine
MDedge Internal Medicine
WHO’s malaria pilot vaccine: No silver bullet, but a potential strike at malaria’s heart
MDedge Internal Medicine
U.S. yellow fever vaccine stocks could be depleted within months
MDedge Internal Medicine
Two doses HPV vaccine are as good as three against genital warts
MDedge Internal Medicine
Flu shots may spark immune adverse events in PD-1 blockade for NSCLC
MDedge Internal Medicine
Adult vaccination is low, with minimal improvement in recent years
MDedge Internal Medicine
Topical imiquimod boosted response to intradermal hepatitis B vaccine
MDedge Internal Medicine
Two-dose HPV vaccine trials in teens show effective immunological responses
MDedge Internal Medicine