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Meningococcal Carriage Following a Vaccination Campaign With MenB-4C and MenB-FHbp in Response to a University Serogroup B Meningococcal Disease Outbreak-Oregon, 2015-2016.

Authors :
McNamara, Lucy A.
Thomas, Jennifer Dolan
MacNeil, Jessica
How Yi Chang
Day, Michael
Fisher, Emily
Martin, Stacey
Poissant, Tasha
Schmink, Susanna E.
Steward-Clark, Evelene
Jenkins, Laurel T.
Xin Wang
Acosta, Anna
Chang, How Yi
Jenkins, Laurel Thompson
Wang, Xin
Oregon Meningococcal Carriage Team
Source :
Journal of Infectious Diseases. Nov2017, Vol. 216 Issue 9, p1130-1140. 11p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Limited data exist on the impact of the serogroup B meningococcal (MenB) vaccines MenB-FHbp and MenB-4C on meningococcal carriage and herd protection. We therefore assessed meningococcal carriage following a MenB vaccination campaign in response to a university serogroup B meningococcal disease outbreak in 2015.<bold>Methods: </bold>A convenience sample of students recommended for vaccination provided oropharyngeal swab specimens and completed questionnaires during 4 carriage surveys over 11 months. Isolates were tested by real-time polymerase chain reaction analysis, slide agglutination, and whole-genome sequencing. Vaccination history was verified via university records and the state immunization registry.<bold>Results: </bold>A total of 4225 oropharyngeal swab specimens from 3802 unique participants were analyzed. Total meningococcal and genotypically serogroup B carriage prevalence among sampled students were stable, at 11%-17% and 1.2%-2.4% during each round, respectively; no participants carried the outbreak strain. Neither 1-3 doses of MenB-FHbp nor 1-2 doses of MenB-4C was associated with decreased total or serogroup B carriage prevalence.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>While few participants completed the full MenB vaccination series, limiting analytic power, these data suggest that MenB-FHbp and MenB-4C do not have a large, rapid impact on meningococcal carriage and are unlikely to provide herd protection in the context of an outbreak response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00221899
Volume :
216
Issue :
9
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Infectious Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
126503732
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jix446