Back to Search Start Over

Implications of differential age distribution of disease-associated meningococcal lineages for vaccine development

Authors :
Brehony, Carina
Trotter, Caroline L.
Ramsay, Mary E.
Jolley, Keith A.
van der Ende, Arie
Carion, Françoise
Berthelsen, Lene
Hoffmann, Steen
Harðardóttir, Hjördís
Vazquez, Julio A.
Murphy, Karen
Toropainen, Maija
Caniça, Manuela
Ferreira, Eugenia
Diggle, Mathew
Edwards, Giles F
Taha, Muhamed-Kheir
Stefanelli, Paola
Kriz, Paula
Gray, Steve J.
Fox, Andrew J.
Jacobsson, Susanne
Claus, Heike
Vogel, Ulrich
Tzanakaki, Georgina
Heuberger, Sigrid
Caugant, Dominique A.
Frosch, Matthias
Maiden, Martin C. J.
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2014.

Abstract

New vaccines targeting meningococci expressing serogroup B polysaccharide have been developed, with some being licensed in Europe. Coverage depends on the distribution of disease-associated genotypes, which may vary by age. It is well established that a small number of hyperinvasive lineages account for most disease, and these lineages are associated with particular antigens, including vaccine candidates. A collection of 4,048 representative meningococcal disease isolates from 18 European countries, collected over a 3-year period, were characterized by multilocus sequence typing (MLST). Age data were available for 3,147 isolates. The proportions of hyperinvasive lineages, identified as particular clonal complexes (ccs) by MLST, differed among age groups. Subjects

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2016..907b6d90f8d1558feda0369ad7d9fcdf