Title: Streptococcus pneumoniae (Pneumococcus) and Disease Prevention by Immunization 2001
1Streptococcus pneumoniae(Pneumococcus) and
Disease Prevention by Immunization2001
- Richard D. Clover, M.D.
- Dept. of Family and Community Medicine
- University of Louisville
2PNEUMOCOCCAL CARRIER STATE
- Disease occurs in persons who are already
asymptomatic carriers - Carrier rates
- 38-60 in preschool children
- 29-35 in grammar school children
- 9-25 in junior high school students
- 18-29 in adults with children at home
- 6 in adults with no children at home
- Virtually all children lt2 of age become
carriers
3LOWER RESPIRATORY TRACT INFECTIONS
- S. pneumoniae is the most common cause of
community-acquired bacterial pneumonia - gt500,000 cases annually
- 25-35 require hospitalization
- 10-25 have concomitant bacteremia
4DISSEMINATED INVASIVE INFECTIONS INCIDENCE OF
BACTEREMIA
- No. cases per 100,000 Total no. cases
- Overall 15-30 39,000-79,500
- gt65 yrs 50-83 25,000-26,560
- Children lt2 yrs 163 3260
- Black Adults 49-58
- Certain Native 156
- Americans
- Children lt2 yrs 2396
5S. pneumoniae MORTALITY
- 40,000 deaths annually due to pneumococcal
infection - More deaths than any other vaccine-preventable
disease half preventable with vaccination - Case-fatality rates for bacteremia 30-40
elderly 15-20 adults - Highest mortality in the elderly and in patients
with underlying medical conditions - S.pneumoniae and influenza together are the 6th
leading cause of death more deaths than BC and
AIDS combined
6DRUG-RESISTANT S.pneumoniae
- Mortality associated with S. pneumoniae dropped
with advent of penicillin in the 1940s - During the 1960s, isolates of S.pneumoniae
moderately resistant to penicillin appeared - Isolates with high-level resistance emerged in
the 1970s - 60-fold increase in 1992 vs 1987
- Prevalence of drug-resistant strains continues to
increase -- up to 35 in some communities
71996 NURSING HOME OUTBREAK OF MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT
S. pneumoniae DISEASE
- First such outbreak documented in adult
population - 11 cases of pneumonia among 84 residents
- 3 deaths
- Multidrug-resistant S. pneumoniae, serotype 23F,
isolated from blood, sputum, and nasopharyngeal
specimens of 74 residents and employees - Only 3 residents had received pneumococcal
vaccine - No further cases after residents received vaccine
and prophylactic antibiotics
8PNEUMOCOCCAL POLYSACCHARIDE VACCINE
- 14-valent pneumococcal vaccine licensed in 1977
- 23-valent preparation licensed in 1983
- 23-valent vaccines cover 85-90 of serotypes
that cause invasive pneumococcal infections - 23-valent vaccines contain serotypes 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6B, 7F, 8, 9N, 9V, 10A, 11A, 12F, 14, 15B,
17F, 18C, 19A, 19F, 20, 22F, 23F, and 33F - 6 serotypes most frequently associated with
drug-resistant infection 6B, 9V, 14, 19A, and 23F
9EFFECTIVENESS IN CASE-CONTROLLED STUDIES
- Study, yr Type of infection Efficacy
- (95 CI)
- Shapiro 1984 Invasive infection 67 (13-87)
- Sims 1988 Invasive infection 70 (37-86)
- Shapiro 1991 Invasive infection
- All pts 56 (42-67)
- Immunocompromised pts 21 (lt0-60)
Immunocompetent pts 61 (47-72) Persons aged
65-74 yrs 80 (51-92) - Farr 1995 Bacteremia 81 (34-94)
- Forrester 1987 Bacteremia lt0 (lt0-55)
- Only case-controlled study that failed to
demonstrate effectiveness against bacteremic
disease. - Methodologic concerns have been raised regarding
this trial.
10ADVERSE REACTIONS TO PNEUMOCOCCAL VACCINE
- Low incidence of adverse reactions
- 50 of patients experience mild, local
reactions, usually lasting lt48 hours - More severe local reactions, moderate systemic
reactions, and severe systemic reactions are rare - 33 of 7531 vaccine recipients had local
reactions and none had severe febrile or
anaphylactic reactions - CDC. MMWR.February 19893864-68, 73-76
- CDC. MMWR. April 199746(RR-8)1-24
- Fine et al. Arch Intern Med. 19941542666-2677
11CONTRAINDICATIONS TO VACCINATION
- Allergy to any vaccine component, including
thimerosal - Acute febrile illness
12COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF PNEUMOCOCCAL VACCINE IN
PREVENTING BACTEREMIA IN THE ELDERLY
- Vaccination is cost saving in preventing
bacteremia alone - With prevention of pneumonia, meningitis, and
other complications added, vaccination is even
more cost effective - Cost saving of more than 8 per person vaccinated
- Vaccination of 23 million gt65 years in 1993 would
have saved 194 million - Sisk etr al. JAMA. 19972781333-1339.
13COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF PNEUMOCOCCAL VACCINE IN
ELDERLY AND HIGH-RISK PATIENTS
- Pneumococcal pneumonia - 78 of the annual cost
of CAP - Vaccinating seniors, high-risk groups lt65 years,
and HIV patients is cost effective - Net saving/person gt50 years of age (in U.S.) is
225 - LMS Alert Vaccines. 1998 No. 5
14CDC RECOMMENDATIONS
- All adults gt65 years
- Immunocompetent persons gt2 years with
- Chronic cardiovascular disease
- Chronic pulmonary disease
- Diabetes mellitus
- Alcoholism
- Chronic liver disease
- CSF leaks
15CDC RECOMMENDATIONS
- Immunocompromised persons gt2 years with
- Functional or anatomic asplenia
- HIV, AIDS
- Leukemia, lymphoma, Hodgkins disease, multiple
myeloma - Generalized malignancy
- Chronic renal failure, nephrotic syndrome
- Receiving immunosuppressive chemotherapy,
radiation - Organ and bone marrow transplant patients
16CDC RECOMMENDATIONS
- Persons gt2 years living in special environments
or social settings, such as - Nursing homes
- Chronic-care facilities
- Alaskan Natives
- Certain Native American populations
17CDC RECOMMENDATIONS
- Uncertain vaccination status
- All persons who have unknown vaccination status
should receive one dose of pneumococcal vaccine - When in doubt, vaccinate
18DURATION OF PROTECTION
- Full antibody response occurs in 2-3 week
- Antibody levels remain elevated for at least 5
years - May decrease to preimmunization levels within 10
years - May decline within 3-5 years in children, within
5-10 years in elderly, splenectomy and renal
dialysis patients, transplant recipients - Duration of protection suggests revaccination for
some patients - CDC.MMWR.February 19893864-68, 73-76
19REVACCINATION GUIDELINES
- Revaccinate persons who
- Are gt65 years of age, if vaccinated gt5 years
earlier and aged lt65 years when first vaccinated - Are 2-64 years and at high risk for serious
pneumococcal infection - Are at high risk and have shown a rapid decline
in antibody levels, if first vaccinated gt5 years
earlier - Revaccination is not routinely recommended for
most - patients
20ADVERSE REACTIONS FOLLOWING REVACCINATION
- Revaccination after intervals of gt5 years is
associated with an increased incidence of adverse
side effects - 3 after first dose
- 11 after second dose
- This increased risk is not a contraindication to
revaccination - Jackson et al.JAMA.1999281243-248
21REVACCINATION OF THE ELDERLY
- Protection by pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine
may not be lifelong - One-time revaccination after gt5 years is
recommended for persons gt65 years vaccinated at
lt65 years - Jackson et al. JAMA. 1999281243-248