Abstract
AbstractBackgroundPneumonia aetiology generally relies on insensitive blood cultures or an assumption that organisms in the pharynx are causal. We determined the causes of lobar pneumonia in rural Gambia using lung aspiration.MethodsPneumonia surveillance was undertaken among all ages. Blood culture and chest radiographs were performed routinely while lung or pleural aspirates were collected from selected patients. 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7) was introduced in August 2009 and replaced by PCV13 from May 2011. We used conventional microbiology, and from April 8, 2011 to July 17, 2012, utilized a multiplex PCR assay on lung aspirates. We calculated proportions with pathogens, associations between co-infecting pathogens, and PCV effectiveness.Results2,550 patients were admitted with clinical pneumonia; 741 with lobar pneumonia or pleural effusion. We performed multiplex PCR on 156 lung and 4 pleural aspirates. Pathogens were detected in 116 specimens, Streptococcus pneumoniae (n=68), Staphylococcus aureus (n=26), and Haemophilus influenzae type b (n=11). Bacteria (n=97) were more common than viruses (n=49). Common viruses were bocavirus (n=11) and influenza (n=11). Co-infections were frequent (n=55). M. catarrhalis was detected in eight patients and in every case there was co-infection with S. pneumoniae. The odds ratio of vaccine-type pneumococcal pneumonia in patients with two or three compared to zero doses of PCV was 0.17 (95% CI 0.06, 0.51).ConclusionsLobar pneumonia in rural Gambia was caused primarily by bacteria, particularly S. pneumoniae and S. aureus. Co-infection was common and M. catarrhalis always co-infected with S. pneumoniae. PCV was highly efficacious against vaccine-type pneumococcal pneumonia.Key MessagesWhat is the key question?Using specimens directly from the infected lung, what is the aetiology of lobar pneumonia in rural West Africa?What is the bottom line?Using specimens directly from the infected lung, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus were the predominant causes of lobar pneumonia in rural West Africa and pneumococcal conjugate vaccine effectively prevented pneumococcal pneumonia.Why read on?Learn about the certain aetiology of lobar pneumonia in 160 Gambian patients with specimens directly from the lung.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory