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Global impact of 10- and 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccines on pneumococcal meningitis in all ages: The PSERENADE project

Yang, Y; Knoll, MD; Herbert, C; Bennett, JC; Feikin, DR; Garcia Quesada, M; Hetrich, MK; Zeger, SL; Kagucia, EW; Xiao, M; et al. Yang, Y; Knoll, MD; Herbert, C; Bennett, JC; Feikin, DR; Garcia Quesada, M; Hetrich, MK; Zeger, SL; Kagucia, EW; Xiao, M; Cohen, AL; van der Linden, M; du Plessis, M; Yildirim, I; Winje, BA; Varon, E; Valenzuela, MT; Valentiner-Branth, P; Steens, A; Scott, JA; Savrasova, L; Sanz, JC; Khan, AS; Oishi, K; Nzoyikorera, N; Nuorti, JP; Mereckiene, J; McMahon, K; McGeer, A; Mackenzie, GA; MacDonald, L; Ladhani, SN; Kristinsson, KG; Kleynhans, J; Kellner, JD; Jayasinghe, S; Ho, P-L; Hilty, M; Hammitt, LL; Guevara, M; Gilkison, C; Gierke, R; Desmet, S; De Wals, P; Dagan, R; Colzani, E; Ciruela, P; Chuluunbat, U; Chan, G; Camilli, R; Bruce, MG; Brandileone, M-CC; Ampofo, K; O’Brien, KL; Hayford, K (2025) Global impact of 10- and 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccines on pneumococcal meningitis in all ages: The PSERENADE project. Journal of Infection, 90 (3). p. 106426. ISSN 0163-4453 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinf.2025.106426
SGUL Authors: Ladhani, Shamez Nizarali

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCVs) introduced in childhood national immunization programs lowered vaccine-type invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD), but replacement with non-vaccine-types persisted throughout the PCV10/13 follow-up period. We assessed PCV10/13 impact on pneumococcal meningitis incidence globally. METHODS: The number of cases with serotyped pneumococci detected in cerebrospinal fluid and population denominators were obtained from surveillance sites globally. Site-specific meningitis incidence rate ratios (IRRs) comparing pre-PCV incidence to each year post-PCV10/13 were estimated by age (<5, 5-17 and ≥18 years) using Bayesian multi-level mixed effects Poisson regression, accounting for pre-PCV trends. All-site weighted average IRRs were estimated using linear mixed-effects regression stratified by age, product (PCV10 or PCV13) and prior PCV7 impact (none, moderate, or substantial). Changes in pneumococcal meningitis incidence were estimated overall and for product-specific vaccine-types and non-PCV13-types. RESULTS: Analyses included 10,168 cases <5 y from PCV13 sites and 2849 from PCV10 sites, 3711 and 1549 for 5-17 y and 29,187 and 5653 for ≥18 y from 42 surveillance sites (30 PCV13, 12 PCV10, 2 PCV10/13) in 30 countries, primarily high-income (84%). Six years after PCV10/PCV13 introduction, pneumococcal meningitis declined 48-74% across products and PCV7 impact strata for children <5 y, 35-62% for 5-17 y and 0-36% for ≥18 y. Impact against PCV10-types at PCV10 sites, and PCV13-types at PCV13 sites was high for all age groups (<5 y: 96-100%; 5-17 y: 77-85%; ≥18 y: 73-85%). After switching from PCV7 to PCV10/13, increases in non-PCV13-types were generally low to none for all age groups. CONCLUSION: Pneumococcal meningitis declined in all age groups following PCV10/PCV13 introduction. Plateaus in non-PCV13-type meningitis suggest less replacement than for all IPD. Data from meningitis belt and high-burden settings were limited.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: © 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The British Infection Association. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Keywords: Incidence, Indirect protection, Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines, Pneumococcal meningitis, Serotype replacement, Serotypes, Vaccine impact, Humans, Pneumococcal Vaccines, Meningitis, Pneumococcal, Child, Preschool, Child, Adolescent, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Incidence, Global Health, Male, Infant, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Middle Aged, Aged, Vaccines, Conjugate, Serogroup
SGUL Research Institute / Research Centre: Academic Structure > Infection and Immunity Research Institute (INII)
Journal or Publication Title: Journal of Infection
ISSN: 0163-4453
Language: en
Media of Output: Print-Electronic
Related URLs:
Publisher License: Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0
Projects:
Project IDFunderFunder ID
INV-010429/OPP1189065Bill and Melinda Gates Foundationhttp://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000865
Dates:
Date Event
2025-02-10 Published
2025-01-27 Published Online
2025-01-21 Accepted
URI: https://openaccess.sgul.ac.uk/id/eprint/118301
Publisher's version: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinf.2025.106426

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