Division of Public Health Surveillance and Response, National Institute for Communicable Diseases, Division of the National Health Laboratory Service, Johannesburg, South Africa.
School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Clin Infect Dis. 2021 Jul 1;73(1):e28-e38. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciaa521.
Invasive meningococcal disease clusters occur among university students and may reflect higher carriage prevalence among this population. We aimed to measure meningococcal carriage prevalence, acquisition, and risk factors among first-year university students in South Africa.
In summer-autumn 2017, after consenting to participate, we collected oropharyngeal swabs and questionnaires on carriage risk factors and tested students for HIV at 2 universities, during registration week (survey 1) and 6-8 weeks later (survey 2). Meningococci were detected by culture and polymerase chain reaction.
We enrolled 2120 students at registration. Mean age was 18.5 years, 59% (1252/2120) were female and 0.8% (16/1984) had HIV. Seventy-eight percent of students returned for survey 2 (1655/2120). Among the cohort, carriage prevalence was 4.7% (77/1655) at registration, increasing to 7.9% (130/1655) at survey 2: 5.0% (83) acquired new carriage, 2.8% (47) had persistent carriage, 1.8% (30) cleared the initial carriage, and 90.3% (1495) remained carriage free. At both surveys, nongenogroupable meningococci predominated, followed by genogroups Y, B, W, and C. On multinomial analysis, risk factors for carriage acquisition included attending nightclubs (adjusted relative risk ratio [aRRR], 2.1; 95% CI, 1.1-4.0), having intimate kissing partners (aRRR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.1-2.9) and HIV (aRRR, 5.0; 95% CI, 1.1-24.4).
Meningococcal carriage among first-year university students increased after 2 months. Sociobehavioral risk factors were associated with increased carriage for all analyses. HIV was associated with carriage acquisition. Until vaccination programs become mandatory in South African universities, data suggest that students with HIV could benefit most from meningococcal vaccination.
侵袭性脑膜炎球菌病在大学生中发生聚集,这可能反映了该人群中更高的带菌流行率。我们旨在测量南非一年级大学生的脑膜炎球菌带菌率、获得率和危险因素。
在 2017 年夏秋季,在同意参与后,我们在两所大学的注册周(调查 1)和 6-8 周后(调查 2)采集了咽拭子和有关带菌危险因素的问卷,并对学生进行了 HIV 检测。通过培养和聚合酶链反应检测脑膜炎球菌。
我们在注册时招募了 2120 名学生。平均年龄为 18.5 岁,59%(1252/2120)为女性,0.8%(16/1984)为 HIV 阳性。78%的学生返回参加了调查 2(1655/2120)。在该队列中,注册时的带菌率为 4.7%(77/1655),在调查 2 时增加到 7.9%(130/1655):5.0%(83)获得新的带菌,2.8%(47)持续带菌,1.8%(30)清除初始带菌,90.3%(1495)仍未带菌。在两次调查中,非 A、C、W、Y 群脑膜炎球菌均占优势,其次是 A、C、W、Y 群。在多变量分析中,带菌获得的危险因素包括参加夜总会(调整后的相对风险比[ARR],2.1;95%可信区间,1.1-4.0)、有亲密接吻伴侣(ARR,1.8;95%可信区间,1.1-2.9)和 HIV(ARR,5.0;95%可信区间,1.1-24.4)。
在两个月后,一年级大学生的脑膜炎球菌带菌率增加。所有分析表明,社会行为危险因素与带菌增加有关。HIV 与带菌获得有关。在南非大学强制接种疫苗计划实施之前,数据表明 HIV 阳性的学生可能从脑膜炎球菌疫苗接种中获益最大。