Madhav C. Gautam, Nepal
Patan Academy of Health Sciences Paediatric Research UnitAuthor Of 7 Presentations
ANTIMICROBIAL SUSCEPTIBILITY PROFILE AND SEROTYPE DISTRIBUTION OF PNEUMOCOCCAL BLOOD CULTURE ISOLATES FROM NEPALESE CHILDREN (ID 672)
- Krishna G. Prajapati, Nepal
- Madhav C. Gautam, Nepal
- Bhishma Pokhrel, Nepal
- Peter J. O'Reilly, United Kingdom
- Meeru Gurung, Nepal
- Merryn Voysey, United Kingdom
- Sanjeev M. Bijukchhe, Nepal
- Sarah Kelly, United Kingdom
- Ganesh Shah, Nepal
- Stephen Thorson, Nepal
- David Murdoch, New Zealand
- Dominic Kelly, United Kingdom
- Maria D. Knoll, United States of America
- Andrew J. Pollard, United Kingdom
- Shrijana Shrestha, Nepal
SEROTYPE-SPECIFIC PNEUMOCOCCAL CARRIAGE DENSITY AMONG HEALTHY NEPALESE CHILDREN POST-PCV10 INTRODUCTION (ID 1047)
- Sonu Shrestha, United Kingdom
- Rama Kandasamy, Australia
- Madhav C. Gautam, Nepal
- Meeru Gurung, Nepal
- Stephen Thorson, Nepal
- Imran Ansari, Nepal
- Katherine Gould,
- Michael J. Carter, United Kingdom
- Dominic Kelly, United Kingdom
- David Murdoch, New Zealand
- Andrew J. Pollard, United Kingdom
- Jason Hinds, United Kingdom
- Shrijana Shrestha, Nepal
Abstract
Background
The density of pneumococcal carriage provides an insight into the dynamics of transmission, colonisation and vaccine effect. We aimed to measure serotype-specific carriage density 2-3 years after 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV10) introduction, using qPCR and bacterial DNA microarray.
Methods
Nasopharyngeal swabs were collected from healthy Nepalese children from the Kathmandu Valley between April 2017 and August 2018. DNA was extracted from the swab media and qPCR performed for pneumococcal autolysin (lytA). Swab media were also plated on blood agar, incubated overnight, and plate sweeps collected. DNA was extracted from plate sweeps and molecular serotyped using the Senti-SPv1.5 microarray (BUGS Bioscience, UK).
Results
1264 swabs were collected and analysed by both microarray and qPCR. The mean density of PCV10 serotypes was significantly higher than non-PCV10 serotypes (10^3.9 vs 10^3.4 copies/ml, p=0.004). Serotypes 1 (10^4.6 copies/ml, 95% CI 10^3.4-5.9) and 6B (10^4.6 copies/ml, 95% CI 10^3.9-5.3) had the highest mean density. Serotypes 4 (10^2.8 copies/ml, 95% CI 10^1.1-4.5) and 9N (10^2.9copies/ml, 95% CI 10^2.1-3.7) had the lowest mean carriage density.
Conclusions
Serotype 1, which causes the greatest proportion of invasive pneumococcal disease in this setting, was found to have the highest carriage density. Further evaluation of the PCV10 impact on carriage density is needed.
NASOPHARYNGEAL CARRIAGE PREVALENCE OF SEROTYPES 3, 6A, 19A AND 6C IN NEPALESE CHILDREN: IS IT TIME TO SWITCH FROM PCV10 TO A DIFFERENT PCV? (ID 528)
- Pratistha Maskey, Nepal
- Meeru Gurung, Nepal
- Sanjeev M. Bijukchhe, Nepal
- Peter J. O'Reilly, United Kingdom
- Himang M. Maskey, Nepal
- Subhash Shrestha, Nepal
- Stephen Thorson, Nepal
- Madhav C. Gautam, Nepal
- Bhishma Pokhrel, Nepal
- Ganesh Shah, Nepal
- Imran Ansari, Nepal
- Sarah Kelly, United Kingdom
- Merryn Voysey, United Kingdom
- Maria Deloria Knoll, United States of America
- Dominic Kelly, United Kingdom
- David Murdoch, New Zealand
- Andrew J. Pollard, United Kingdom
- Shrijana Shrestha, Nepal
IMPACT OF NUMBER OF CHILDREN IN THE HOUSEHOLD ON NASOPHARYNGEAL CARRIAGE OF STREPTOCOCCUS PNEUMONIAE IN HEALTHY NEPALESE CHILDREN (ID 534)
- Himang M. Maskey, Nepal
- Meeru Gurung, Nepal
- Sanjeev M. Bijukchhe, Nepal
- Peter J. O'Reilly, United Kingdom
- Pratistha Maskey, Nepal
- Subhash Shrestha, Nepal
- Madhav C. Gautam, Nepal
- Stephen Thorson, Nepal
- Bhishma Pokhrel, Nepal
- Ganesh Shah, Nepal
- Imran Ansari, Nepal
- Sarah Kelly, United Kingdom
- Merryn Voysey, United Kingdom
- Maria Deloria Knoll, United States of America
- Dominic Kelly, United Kingdom
- David Murdoch, New Zealand
- Andrew J. Pollard, United Kingdom
- Shrijana Shrestha, Nepal
MONITORING VACCINE IMPACT ON COMMUNITY CARRIAGE IN NEPAL REVEALS CHANGES IN THE CIRCULATING POPULATION OF PNEUMOCOCCAL SEROTYPES AND ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE GENES (ID 977)
- Sonu Shrestha, United Kingdom
- Rama Kandasamy, Australia
- Susana Camara,
- Merryn Voysey, United Kingdom
- Madhav C. Gautam, Nepal
- Meeru Gurung, Nepal
- Katherine Gould,
- Stephen Thorson, Nepal
- Imran Ansari, Nepal
- Shrijana Shrestha, Nepal
- Maria D. Knoll, United States of America
- David Murdoch, New Zealand
- Dominic Kelly, United Kingdom
- Jason Hinds, United Kingdom
- Andrew J. Pollard, United Kingdom
Abstract
Background
Community carriage of pneumococcal serotypes in children was assessed pre- and post-PCV10 introduction in Nepal to monitor pneumococcal vaccine impact. Molecular serotyping by microarray enabled detection of multiple-serotype carriage plus non-encapsulated pneumococcal lineages, related Streptococcus species and selected antimicrobial resistance genes.
Methods
Nasopharyngeal swabs were collected from healthy Nepalese children in 2014-15 (pre-PCV10) and 2017-18 (post-PCV10). DNA was extracted from plate sweeps of 1,241 and 1,445 swab cultures for pre- and post-vaccine periods respectively and analysed by Senti-SP molecular serotyping microarray.
Results
Comparing carriage among children pre- and post-PCV10, there was a decrease in PCV10 serotype carriage (37% vs 17%) and an increase in non-vaccine serotype carriage (67% vs 73%). There was no change for non-encapsulated pneumococcal lineages (16% vs 16%), an increase in related Streptococcal species (22% vs 25%) and an increase in detection of antimicrobial resistance genes (65% vs 74%). Multiple pneumococcal serotype carriage decreased (24% vs 16%) and multiple carriage including non-encapsulated pneumococci and related Streptococcal species also decreased (45% vs 41%).
Conclusions
Introduction of PCV10 in Nepal has resulted in a decrease in vaccine type carriage within two years. However, increases in carriage of non-vaccine types as well as antimicrobial resistance genes and related Streptococcal species were observed.
THE IMPACT OF PNEUMOCOCCAL CONJUGATE VACCINE INTRODUCTION IN NEPAL: A SIX-YEAR PAEDIATRIC SURVEILLANCE STUDY (ID 516)
- Shrijana Shrestha, Nepal
- Meeru Gurung, Nepal
- Stephen Thorson, Nepal
- Bhishma Pokhrel, Nepal
- Bibek Khadka, Nepal
- Pratistha Maskey, Nepal
- Puja Amatya, Nepal
- Madhav C. Gautam, Nepal
- Michael J. Carter, United Kingdom
- Rama Kandasamy, Australia
- Brian Wahl, United States of America
- Sarah Kelly, United Kingdom
- Krishna G. Prajapati, Nepal
- Sonu Shrestha, United Kingdom
- Maria Deloria Knoll, United States of America
- Jason Hinds, United Kingdom
- Ganesh Shah, Nepal
- Dominic Kelly, United Kingdom
- David Murdoch, New Zealand
- Merryn Voysey, United Kingdom
- Andrew J. Pollard, United Kingdom
Abstract
Background
S. pneumoniae is a major cause of bacterial pneumonia and an important cause of invasive bacterial disease (IBD) in children under-five years of age in Nepal. Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, PCV10, was introduced in 2015 with a 2+1 schedule.
Methods
We assessed the programmatic impact of PCV10 introduction using surveillance for nasopharyngeal (NP) colonisation, pneumonia and IBD. NP swabs from pneumonia inpatients and from healthy children, blood cultures from inpatients with suspected IBD, and chest x-rays from inpatient pneumonia cases were obtained over a 6-year period (2014-2019).
Results
The proportion of pneumonia cases with radiographic endpoint-consolidation (likely bacterial) was 34% lower (95%CI 19-46%) in 2018 compared with the pre-vaccine period (2014-2015). Vaccine serotype (VT) carriage in children under 2-years of age with pneumonia in 2019 was 78% lower (95%CI 30-93%) than in the pre-vaccine period.
Among healthy 6-23 month old children (urban and rural cohorts), VT-carriage declined 74% (95%CI 43-82%) by 2019. An increase in PCV13-additional-serotype carriage was seen in 2018 among rural-children (prevalence-ratio 1.65, 95%CI 1.17-2.32), but not urban-children.
Serotype 1 remains the dominant serotype detected in cases of invasive pneumococcal disease.
Conclusions
A decrease in prevalence of endpoint-consolidation-pneumonia and a decrease in vaccine-serotype circulation have been observed post PCV introduction in Nepal.
IMPACT OF PCV10 IN NEPAL ON NASOPHARYNGEAL CARRIAGE OF PNEUMOCOCCUS IN YOUNG INFANTS PRIOR TO THEIR VACCINATION (ID 530)
- Subhash Shrestha, Nepal
- Meeru Gurung, Nepal
- Brian Wahl, United States of America
- Sanjeev M. Bijukchhe, Nepal
- Peter J. O'Reilly, United Kingdom
- Pratistha Maskey, Nepal
- Himang M. Maskey, Nepal
- Madhav C. Gautam, Nepal
- Stephen Thorson, Nepal
- Bhishma Pokhrel, Nepal
- Ganesh Shah, Nepal
- Imran Ansari, Nepal
- Sarah Kelly, United Kingdom
- Merryn Voysey, United Kingdom
- Maria D. Knoll, United States of America
- Dominic Kelly, United Kingdom
- David Murdoch, New Zealand
- Andrew J. Pollard, United Kingdom
- Shrijana Shrestha, Nepal