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Pneumococcal Parapneumonic Empyema Up in Some Areas


 

SAN FRANCISCO — The incidence of pediatric pneumococcal parapneumonic empyema doubled in Utah and surrounding areas since introduction of the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, Carrie L. Byington, M.D., said in a poster presentation at the annual meeting of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

Serotypes of Streptococcus pneumoniae not covered by the vaccine caused most of the recent cases.

The activity of bacterial serotypes varies by geographical region. In the past decade, Utah has had one of the highest rates of pneumococcal parapneumonic empyema (PPE) in children due to S. pneumoniae serotype 1, which the vaccine does not cover, said Dr. Byington of the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, and her associates.

A search of the Intermountain Health Care data warehouse found 776 cases of pediatric PPE between March 1996 and June 2005, 62% of which were treated at Primary Children's Medical Center, Salt Lake City.

In the period 1996–2000, before introduction of 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7 or Prevnar), the center saw 38 cases per year, compared with 72 cases annually between 2001 and 2004, a significant difference.

Among 295 cases of culture-confirmed invasive pneumococcal disease in children at the center, 74 were PPE, representing 18% of invasive pneumococcal disease in the prevaccine years and 32% since the vaccine.

The investigators retrieved and serotyped pleural and fluid isolates of S. pneumoniae from the 74 cases.

The proportion of PPE due to serotypes covered in the vaccine decreased from 37% (9 of 24 cases) in the prevaccine era to 14% (7 of 50 cases) in more recent years.

Serotype 1 was the most common cause of PPE due to nonvaccine serotypes in both time periods, but disease due to other nonvaccine serotypes has become more common.

Serotype 1 caused 11 (46%) of 24 PPE cases in the earlier period and 17 (34%) of 50 cases since the vaccine, she said.

Other nonvaccine serotypes caused only four cases (16%) of PPE in the prevaccine years but 26 cases (52%) of PPE in the postvaccine years.

The pneumococcal vaccine may need to be broadened to cover some of these serotypes, Dr. Byington suggested in an interview.

Clinical records for the 74 PPE cases reported concomitant bacteremia in 28 children, lung abscesses in 3, and peritonitis in 1 child.

Four children developed hemolytic uremic syndrome, and 38 required intensive care, primarily to manage respiratory failure or following surgical decortication.

Four children died, two of them from PPE due to a nonvaccine serotype.

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