Streptococcus pneumoniaeSerotype 4 Outbreak in a Home for the Aged: Report and Review of Recent Outbreaks

Author:

Gleich Sheldon,Morad Yosef,Echague Ramon,Miller James R.,Kornblum John,Sampson Jacquelyn S.,Butler Jay C.

Abstract

AbstractObjective:To describe a pneumonia outbreak caused byStreptococcus pneumoniaeamong residents of a home for the aged and to review contemporary pneumococcal outbreaks.Design:Epidemiological investigation.Methods:Spneumoniaeisolates were serotyped and analyzed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Paired sera were tested for antibodies to pneumococcal surface adhesin A protein (PsaA, a 37-kDa cell-wall protein). Pneumococcal outbreaks reported in the last decade in English were reviewed.Results:Pneumonia developed in 18 of 200 residents. In 11 (61%), a pneumococcal etiology was demonstrated.S pneumoniae,serotype 4, was isolated from the blood cultures of 3 patients; all isolates were indistinguishable by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Pneumococcal involvement was established in 2 by sputum culture and latex agglutination of parapneumonic fluid and in 6 others by a twofold rise in optical density of serum antibody reactive to PsaA. Pneumococcal immunization had not previously been received by any patient; mortality was 22%. No additional cases were noted following administration of pneumococcal vaccine and antibiotic prophylaxis with penicillin or erythromycin. Twenty-six outbreaks of invasive pneumococcal disease since 1990 were reviewed. Twelve occurred in the United States, and serotypes 23F, 14, and 4 accounted for 8 (67%) of 12 outbreaks. All confirmed serotypes in US outbreaks are included in the 23-valent vaccine. More than one half of pneumococcal outbreaks worldwide involved elderly persons in hospitals or long-term-care facilities.Conclusions:A pneumococcal pneumonia outbreak occurred among unvaccinated residents of a residential facility for the aged. Institutionalized elderly persons are at risk of outbreaks of pneumococcal disease and should be vaccinated.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Epidemiology

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