Hospitalizations of Pneumococcal Meningitis in the Era of
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Hospitalizations of Pneumococcal Meningitis in the Era of Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine C. Jillian Tsai, Ph. D. Department of Preventive Medicine Vanderbilt University
Streptococcus pneumoniae n n n Gram-positive (diplo)cocci Main pathogenic factor: polysaccharide capsule >90 serotypes n n Type-specific antibody is protective High risk • • • Extremes of age Chronic diseases Immune compromised
Pneumococcal Disease in Children < 5 Years of Age Meningitis Bacteremia Pneumonia Otitis media Invasive pneumococcal disease
Pneumococcal Meningitis n n n #1 Cause of community-acquired bacterial meningitis Mortality 16 -37% Among survivors, 30 -52% risk of neurological complications • • • Deafness Impaired mental status Seizures Intellectual impairment Hearing loss and cranial neuropathies Subdural effussion and empyema Weisfelt M et al, Lancet Neurology, 2006 Kastenbauer S et al, Brain, 2003
Pneumococcal Vaccines n 1983 -1999 • 23 -valent polysaccharide vaccine n 2000 -present • 7 -valent conjugate vaccine (PCV 7) 7 serotypes >80% of invasive disease in children n T cell dependent immune response – immunogenicity in children <2 yrs n RCT: 89% efficacy against invasive disease n Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2002; 21: 810– 815 Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2003; 22: 10– 16 Lancet. 2005; 365: 1139– 1146 N Engl J Med. 2001; 344: 403– 409
Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine (PCV 7) n Universal vaccination • Children < 2 years old n 2, 4, 6 months, booster at 12 -15 months • 2 -4 years with specific chronic diseases n Vaccine coverage (2005) • ~83% children between 19 -35 months of age had at ≥ 3 doses of PCV 7
Incidence of Invasive Pneumococcal Disease among Children under 2 Years of Age Kyaw et al. N Engl J Med 2006; 354(14)
Objectives n n To estimate pneumococcal meningitis hospitalization rates from 1994 to 2004, by age groups To estimate the number of hospitalizations prevented after routine immunization was recommended
Source of Data n Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) • • • Largest inpatient database publicly available ~1, 000 community hospitals (~20%) Stratified probability sampling in 5 strata n ownership/control, bed size, teaching status, urban/rural, and US region • Hospital and discharge weights to obtain national estimates n Study period • 1994 -2004
Methods n Exposure of interest • PCV 7 (surrogate marker: calendar year) n Outcome – hospitalizations due to: • Pneumococcal meningitis • Streptococcal meningitis • Non-bacterial meningitis + non-specified meningitis n Definition of cases • Principal discharge diagnosis (ICD 9 -CM)
Methods (cont. ) n Analysis • Rate = Weighted No. of Cases Census Population • Stratified by calendar years and age n Data collected during 1994 -2004 • 79, 498, 751 hospitalizations weighted national estimate of 365, 259, 792 hospitalizations • 21, 372 pneumococcal meningitis
Number of Pneumococcal Meningitis Hospitalizations, by Year
Rates of Pneumococcal Meningitis Hospitalizations, by Age and Year
Rates of Pneumococcal Meningitis Hospitalizations, by Sex and Year
Estimating PCV 7 Vaccination Program Effect n Study period divided into 3 segments • Pre-PCV 7 (1994 -1999): reference • Transition (2000) • Post-PCV 7 (2001 -2004) n Rate difference = (average post-PCV 7 rate – average pre-PCV 7 rate)
Pneumococcal Meningitis Hospitalization Rates (per 100, 000) *p<0. 05 -5. 1 (-66%)* -0. 4 (-52%)* -0. 1 (-16%) -0. 1 (-26%)* -0. 1 (-11%) -0. 4 (-33%)*
Streptococcal Meningitis Hospitalization Rates (per 100, 000) -4. 6 (-41%)* -0. 3 (-48%)* *p<0. 05
Non-Bacterial and Unspecified Meningitis Hospitalization Rates (per 100, 000) -11. 2 (-11%) *p<0. 05 +7 (54%)* +11. 2 (90%)* +5. 7 (37%)* +2. 7 (36%) +0. 7 (9%)*
Summary: pneumococcal meningitis 66% decline in children < 2 years n 11 -52% declines in other ages n Coincident with PCV 7 program n Similar to declines in all invasive diseases previously reported n No similar decline in non-related meningitis n
Limitations of the Study n n Ecological design Potential misclassification of cases Could not rule out the impact of secular trends, outbreaks, and changes in diagnosis/management of the disease Incomplete race/ethnicity data
Conclusion n n Both children and the elderly have benefited from the routine PCV 7 immunization program Estimated pneumococcal meningitis hospitalizations prevented in 20012004: • Children <2 years old: 554 • People of all ages: 1, 659
Acknowledgment n Vanderbilt University • Marie R. Griffin, MD, MPH • Carlos G. Grijalva, MD, MPH n CDC • J. Pekka Nuorti, MD, DSc n Source of Funding • Association for Prevention Teaching and Research and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Cooperative Agreements (TS-1392).
Age Distribution (%) of Pneumococcal Meningitis Hospitalizations, by Year
Sex Distribution (%) of Pneumococcal Meningitis Hospitalizations, by Year
Trends of pneumococcal meningitis hospitalization rates
Trends of streptococcal meningitis hospitalization rates
Trends of other specified meningitis hospitalization rates
Trends of all other meningitis hospitalization rates
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