1. Emergence of serotype 10A-ST11189 among pediatric invasive pneumococcal diseases, South Korea, 2014-2019
- Author
-
Hye Kyung Cho, Byung Wook Eun, Eun Young Cho, Hoan Jong Lee, Hwang Min Kim, Su Eun Park, Kyung Hyo Kim, Eun Song Song, Kyuyol Rhie, Taekjin Lee, Chun Soo Kim, Jae Hong Choi, Young Jin Hong, Eun Hwa Choi, Yun Kyung Kim, Ki Wook Yun, Sung Hee Oh, Jin Han Kang, Nam Hee Kim, Joon Kee Lee, Jina Lee, Dae Sun Jo, Jong Gyun Ahn, Chi Eun Oh, Hyunju Lee, and Yae Jean Kim
- Subjects
Serotype ,Pneumococcal disease ,General Veterinary ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Antimicrobial susceptibility ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Serogroup ,Virology ,Pneumococcal Infections ,Multiple drug resistance ,Pneumococcal Vaccines ,Infectious Diseases ,Streptococcus pneumoniae ,Genotype ,Republic of Korea ,medicine ,Molecular Medicine ,Multilocus sequence typing ,Humans ,Child - Abstract
Replacement with nonvaccine serotypes (NVTs) among invasive pneumococcal diseases (IPDs) after the introduction of extended-valency pneumococcal conjugate vaccines varies in predominant serotypes across countries. This study analyzed changes in serotype distribution through serotyping, multilocus sequence typing, and antimicrobial susceptibility testing of 168 pediatric IPD isolates obtained from a multihospital-based surveillance system during 2014-2019 in South Korea. Vaccine serotypes (VTs) accounted for 16.1% (19A, 10.1%; 6A, 1.8%; and 19F 1.8%), 82.1% were NVTs (10A, 23.8%; 15A, 8.3%; 12F, 6.5%; 15C, 6.5%; and 15B, 6.0%), and three (1.8%) were nontypeable. Serotype 10A was the most common serotype, with a significant increase from 11.5% in 2014 to 33.3% in 2019 (p < 0.05 for the trend). Other NVTs decreased from 70.4% to 41.7% between 2015 and 2019, most notably in serotype 12F (from 14.8% to 0%). Almost all (95.0%) serotype 10A isolates were ST11189, which were multidrug resistant.
- Published
- 2021