An outbreak of serotype-1 sequence type 306 invasive pneumococcal disease in an Australian Indigenous population

Author:

Cook Heather M1,Giele Carolien M2,Jayasinghe Sanjay H3,Wakefield Angela4,Krause Vicki L1

Affiliation:

1. Enhanced Invasive Pneumococcal Disease Surveillance Working Group; Centre for Disease Control, Top End Health Services, Northern Territory, Australia

2. Enhanced Invasive Pneumococcal Disease Surveillance Working Group; Communicable Diseases Control, Health Department of Western Australia, Australia

3. Enhanced Invasive Pneumococcal Disease Surveillance Working Group;National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance (NCIRS);Discipline of Child and Adolescent Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Australia

4. Enhanced Invasive Pneumococcal Disease Surveillance Working Group; Communicable Diseases Branch, Queensland Health, Australia

Abstract

Between 2010 and 2013, an outbreak of serotype-1 sequence type 306 (ST306) invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) occurred primarily in remote locations of Northern and Central Australia. This is a descriptive study of the epidemiology of the outbreak using nationwide IPD surveillance data, supplemented with more detailed data held by affected jurisdictions, and of the response to the outbreak, including vaccination strategies. In the year the outbreak peaked (2011), serotype-1 IPD incidence was over 30-fold higher in the affected regions than in the rest of Australia (incidence rate ratio: 30.7 [95% CI 20.1–48.9]). The study includes 245 cases of serotype-1 IPD from the outbreak regions, with 75.5% identified as Indigenous. No reported cases of serotype-1 IPD occurred in young children who had completed either a 10- or 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine schedule. However serotype-1 IPD did occur in older children who had previously received 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine. Development of public-health-focused national IPD management guidelines, including suitable vaccine strategies for consistent use nationwide, could potentially decrease the duration and intensity of similar outbreaks in the future.

Publisher

Australian Government Department of Health

Subject

General Medicine

Reference41 articles.

1. Australian Government Department of Health. Pneumococcal disease (invasive) Public dataset. [Online.] Canberra: Australian Government Department of Health; 2019. [Accessed on 24 June 2019.] Available from: http://www9.health.gov.au/cda/source/pub_pneum.cfm.

2. Krause VL, Reid SJ, Merianos A. Invasive pneumocccal disease in the Northern Territory of Australia, 1994–1998. Med J Aust. 2000;173(S2):S27–31.

3. National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance (NCIRS). History of immunisation in Australia. [Internet.] Sydney: NCIRS; 2019. [Accessed on 24 June 2019.] Available from: http://ncirs.org.au/health-professionals/history-immunisation-australia.

4. Torzillo PJ, Hanna JN, Morey F, Gratten M, Dixon J, Erlich J. Invasive pneumococcal disease in central Australia. Med J Aust. 1989;162(4):182–6.

5. Roche PW, Krause VL, Bartlett M, Coleman D, Cook H, Davis C et al. Invasive pneumococcal disease in Australia, 2004. Commun Dis Intell Q Rep. 2006;30(1):80–92.

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