Talbot Thomas R, Poehling Katherine A, Hartert Tina V, Arbogast Patrick G, Halasa Natasha B, Mitchel Ed, Schaffner William, Craig Allen S, Edwards Kathryn M, Griffin Marie R
Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, USA.
Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2004 Aug;23(8):726-31. doi: 10.1097/01.inf.0000133046.60555.de.
Racial differences in the epidemiology of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) have been widely recognized, but the impact of conjugate pneumococcal vaccine (PCV) introduction in 2000 on these differences has not been extensively studied.
IPD episodes in 5 Tennessee counties from January 1995 through December 2002 were collected prospectively using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Active Bacterial Core Surveillance system (ABCs). Trained nurses collected clinical data, and antibiotic susceptibility testing was performed on available isolates.
Before vaccine licensure, IPD rates were highest in children younger than 2 years and in blacks. The disparity in IPD rates between blacks and whites younger than 2 years of age substantially diminished after PCV introduction. In 1999, the IPD rate in black children younger than 2 years was 340.2 per 100,000, representing 176.5 more events per 100,000 than in white children (P < 0.001). In 2002, this rate had decreased 83% to 57.4 per 100,000, similar to the rate in white children (39.6 per 100,000; P = 0.31). Before vaccine licensure, a higher percentage of isolates from whites were antibiotic-nonsusceptible. In 2002, the proportion of antibiotic-nonsusceptible pneumococcal isolates was similar in whites and blacks of all ages for the first time during the study period (P > 0.05 for separate comparisons of penicillin, cephalosporin and erythromycin nonsusceptibility). These changes occurred despite a lower PCV vaccination coverage in Tennessee in blacks than in whites (31.2% versus 47.6%).
With conjugate pneumococcal vaccine introduction in Tennessee, racial differences in the incidence rates of IPD have largely been eliminated, particularly in young children.
侵袭性肺炎球菌疾病(IPD)流行病学中的种族差异已得到广泛认可,但2000年引入的肺炎球菌结合疫苗(PCV)对这些差异的影响尚未得到广泛研究。
利用疾病控制和预防中心的主动细菌核心监测系统(ABCs)前瞻性收集了1995年1月至2002年12月田纳西州5个县的IPD发病情况。经过培训的护士收集临床数据,并对可用分离株进行抗生素敏感性测试。
在疫苗获得许可之前,2岁以下儿童和黑人的IPD发病率最高。引入PCV后,2岁以下黑人和白人之间的IPD发病率差异大幅缩小。1999年,2岁以下黑人儿童的IPD发病率为每10万人340.2例,比白人儿童每10万人多176.5例(P<0.001)。2002年,这一发病率下降了83%,降至每10万人57.4例,与白人儿童的发病率(每10万人39.6例;P=0.31)相似。在疫苗获得许可之前,白人分离株中抗生素不敏感的比例更高。2002年,在研究期间,所有年龄段的白人和黑人中抗生素不敏感的肺炎球菌分离株比例首次相似(青霉素、头孢菌素和红霉素不敏感性单独比较时P>0.05)。尽管田纳西州黑人的PCV疫苗接种覆盖率低于白人(31.2%对47.6%),但仍出现了这些变化。
随着田纳西州引入肺炎球菌结合疫苗,IPD发病率的种族差异已基本消除,尤其是在幼儿中。