학술논문

Nationwide Outbreak of Invasive Pneumococcal Disease in Israel Caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae Serotype 2.
Document Type
Article
Source
Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dec2021, Vol. 73 Issue 11, pe3768-e3777. 10p.
Subject
*PUBLIC health surveillance
*SEQUENCE analysis
*SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms
*STREPTOCOCCAL diseases
*PNEUMOCOCCAL vaccines
*STREPTOCOCCUS
*MAPS
*EPIDEMICS
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*DRUG resistance in microorganisms
Language
ISSN
1058-4838
Abstract
Background Invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae serotype 2 (Sp2) is infrequent. Large-scale outbreaks were not been reported following pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) implementation. We describe a Sp2 IPD outbreak in Israel, in the PCV13 era, with focus on Sp2 population structure and evolutionary dynamics. Methods The data were derived from a population-based, nationwide active surveillance of IPD since 2009. PCV7/PCV13 vaccines were introduced in July 2009 and November 2010, respectively. Sp2 isolates were tested for antimicrobial susceptibility, multilocus sequence typing, and whole-genome sequencing (WGS) analysis. Results Overall, 170 Sp2 IPD cases were identified during 2009–2019; Sp2 increased in 2015 and caused 6% of IPD during 2015–2019, a 7-fold increase compared with 2009–2014. The outbreak was caused by a previously unreported molecular type (ST-13578), initially observed in Israel in 2014. This clone caused 88% of Sp2 during 2015–2019. ST-13578 is a single-locus variant of ST-1504, previously reported globally including in Israel. WGS analysis confirmed clonality among the ST-13578 population. Single-nucleotide polymorphism–dense regions support a hypothesis that the ST-13578 outbreak clone evolved from ST-1504 by recombination. All tested strains were penicillin-susceptible (minimum inhibitory concentration <0.06 μg/mL). The ST-13578 clone was identified almost exclusively (99%) in the Jewish population and was mainly distributed in 3 of 7 Israeli districts. The outbreak is still ongoing, although it began declining in 2017. Conclusions To the best of our knowledge, this is the first widespread Sp2 outbreak since PCV13 introduction worldwide, caused by the emerging ST-13578 clone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]