1. Parapneumonic effusions related to Streptococcus pneumoniae: serotype and disease severity trends from 2006 to 2018 in Bristol, UK
- Author
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Nick Maskell, Shamez Ladhani, Norman K Fry, Robert Challen, Adam Finn, Paul North, Catherine Hyams, David T Arnold, Zahin Amin-Chowdhury, Leon Danon, O Martin Williams, Philip Williams, Robyn Heath, David Hettle, Gabriella Ruffino, and Charli Grimes
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Medicine ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Rationale Streptococcus pneumoniae epidemiology is changing in response to vaccination and some data suggest that empyema incidence is increasing. However, differences exist between the UK and US studies. We describe trends in the clinical phenotype of adult pneumococcal pleural infection, including simple parapneumonic effusions (SPE) in the pneumococcal conjugate vaccination (PCV) era.Objectives To determine whether there were differences in pneumococcal disease presentation and severity associated with pleural infection.Methods A retrospective cohort study, all adults ≥16 years admitted to three large UK hospitals, 2006–2018 with pneumococcal disease. 2477 invasive pneumococcal cases were identified: 459 SPE and 100 pleural infection cases. Medical records were reviewed for each clinical episode. Serotype data were obtained from the UK Health Security Agency national reference laboratory.Results Incidence increased over time, including non-PCV-serotype disease. PCV7-serotype disease declined following paediatric PCV7 introduction, but the effect of PCV13 was less apparent as disease caused by the additional six serotypes plateaued with serotypes 1 and 3 causing such parapneumonic effusions from 2011 onwards.Patients with pleural infection had a median survival 468 days (95% CI 340 to 590) vs 286 days (95% CI 274 to 335) in those with SPE. Pleural infection associated with frank pus had lower 90-day mortality than pleural infection without pus (0% vs 29%, p
- Published
- 2023
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