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Infection and Immunity, January 2005, p. 431-435, Vol. 73, No. 1
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.1.431-435.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, St. Mary's Hospital, London, United Kingdom,1 National Reference Laboratory for Pneumococcus, Department of Microbiology, National Public Health Institute, Oulu,2 Department of Vaccines, National Public Health Institute (KTL), Helsinki, Finland3
Received 13 July 2004/ Returned for modification 9 September 2004/ Accepted 16 September 2004
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Control of pneumococcal disease is being spearheaded by the conjugate capsular polysaccharide vaccines, which are highly effective at preventing invasive disease due to isolates of the vaccine serotypes (1). In the context of these "imperfect" vaccines, which prevent disease by most but not all of the serotypes that most commonly cause disease, there is considerable interest in an improved understanding of the ability of the different pneumococcal serotypes and strains (clones) to cause invasive disease and the relative contributions to invasiveness of the capsular serotype and the underlying genotype of the strain. Selective pressures applied by vaccination lead to increased carriage of, and exposure to, pneumococci of nonvaccine serotypes (serotype replacement) (14) and may favor the emergence of successful strains, originally of vaccine serotype, that have acquired a nonvaccine capsule through serotype switching (4). The impact of these processes on disease will depend on the ability of the replacing strains to cause disease, which is largely unknown.
An understanding of the relative invasiveness of pneumococcal strains requires a precise procedure for characterizing pneumococci, which is provided by the use of multilocus sequence typing (MLST) (5) and suitable strain collections that allow the prevalence of serotypes and strains which cause invasive disease in a population to be related to the extent of exposure of that population to these pneumococci. Ideally, this would be achieved by comparing the prevalence of each serotype or strain in disease to the extent of their acquisition, but such data are rarely available and difficult to obtain, especially for serotypes or strains with a short mean duration of carriage. The prevalence of strains in asymptomatic carriage has therefore been used as a proxy for acquisition (2).
In this study, we have compared the serotypes and strains of pneumococci that cause invasive disease in children less than 2 years of age in Finland to their prevalence among carriage in Finnish children of the same age.
(This work was presented in part at the 4th International Symposium on Pneumococci and Pneumococcal Diseases, Helsinki, Finland, abstract number Epi-22, May 2004.)
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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MLST.
MLST was performed as previously described (5). Sequences of each of the seven gene fragments used in the pneumococcal MLST scheme were obtained on both DNA strands by using an Applied Biosystems 3700 capillary sequencer and were edited by using STARS (a free software package available from http://www.mlst.net or http://www.molbiol.ox.ac.uk/
paediat/stars/). Allele assignments were made by using the MLST website (http://spneumoniae.mlst.net). All alleles not already present in the pneumococcal MLST database were verified by resequencing the gene fragment on both strands. Some STs were found to be associated with isolates of more than one serotype. In all such cases, serotype switching was confirmed by repeating the serotyping and MLST of the isolates. A single serotype 6A strain (IO835) was found to have died in storage. DNA from this strain was therefore not available for MLST. Allelic profiles were therefore obtained for 223 strains.
Putative cases of serotype switching were identified as STs associated with more than one serotype. Strains characterized as part of this work were studied in conjunction with previously collected samples of S. pneumoniae from Finland together with those in the MLST database. For those examples in which a single example of a novel ST-serotype combination was observed when compared with these datasets, the STs of the isolates were verified by resequencing of the MLST loci and, if necessary, the serotypes were rechecked.
Statistical analysis. The diversity of STs was calculated by using Simpson's index of diversity (D). Confidence intervals for D were estimated by using the method of Grundmann et al. (7). Odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for individual serotypes and STs were calculated relative to all other serotypes (or STs) in the sample, as previously described (9).
| RESULTS |
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Estimate of odds ratios for serotypes and clones. To assess the invasive disease potential of the serotypes and STs, we compared the invasive isolates with a previously characterized set of strains from nasopharyngeal carriage in children of the same age in Tampere, Finland, collected between 1994 and 1996. Point estimates of the ORs for serogroups (serotypes) and STs are shown in Tables 1 and 2, respectively. The highest OR was associated with serotype 38, although this had wide confidence intervals due to the relatively small numbers of this serotype in the study. Serotypes 14, 18C, 19A, and 6B all had a significantly elevated risk of causing invasive disease. Serotype 6A, in contrast, exhibited a significant association with carriage, as did serotypes 35F and 11A. The majority of invasive disease was due to pneumococci of vaccine serotype, as reflected by a significant association with disease for pooled vaccine serotypes (OR, 2.18; 95% CI, 1.47 to 3.23).
The ORs for the major STs are shown in Table 2. The Spain9V-3 clone, ST 156, was found to be strongly associated with invasive disease. Significant associations with invasive disease were also found for ST 482 (serotype 19A), ST 191 (a previously defined invasive type 7F clone), ST 124 (a previously defined invasive type 14 clone), and ST 138 (a previously defined invasive type 6B clone). STs 485 and 62 (types 19F and 11A, respectively) displayed significantly reduced invasive disease potential (ORs of <1).
Serotype switching. STs associated with more than one serotype were identified as putative cases of serotype switching. Multiple serotypes associated with a single ST are shown in Table 2 and were found for STs 156, 162, 66, and 199. Among less frequent genotypes, ST 1067 was found as single type 6A and 23F isolates in this data set.
| DISCUSSION |
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In Finland, the majority of isolates from invasive disease (160 out of 224 [71%]) were of vaccine serotype, and the OR for invasive disease of pooled vaccine serotypes was significantly elevated above unity. As expected, the STs recovered from invasive disease were significantly less diverse than a comparable sample from carriage among children of the same age, suggesting that particular clones are overrepresented in disease compared to carriage.
The ORs for invasive disease obtained for specific serotypes and clones in Finland can be compared to those estimated using a similar study design for pneumococci from Oxford, United Kingdom (2). Because invasive disease is a rare event, it was necessary to include all isolates retrieved from invasive pneumococcal disease in Finland in children less than 24 months of age. The sampling frame for disease is therefore neither perfectly contemporaneous nor contiguous with that for carriage, and this must be accepted as a limitation of the study.
As found in Oxford, there were marked differences in the invasiveness of individual serotypes and clones in Finland, and the results of the two studies were broadly consistent. Excepting serotype 1, which was not represented in the Finnish data sets, all of the serotypes that had ORs >1 in the United Kingdom (types 4, 1, 14, 18C, 7F, 9V, and 19A) also had ORs >1 in Finland. The most marked differences between the two studies were in the estimates of ORs for 6B and 19A, which were both significantly associated with invasive disease in this study, whereas no strong association was detected previously. Similarly broadly consistent results were further found in a study conducted in Sweden, which compared isolates from invasive disease in all age groups (mainly in individuals >65 years of age) with those carried among children in day care centers (12).
An advantage of carrying out studies in different countries is that the rank order of serotypes that cause invasive disease varies geographically, allowing the invasiveness of additional serotypes to be estimated. Similarly, individual pneumococcal serotypes typically include a number of genetically divergent strains which also may differ between countries, providing comparisons of the invasiveness of different strains of the same serotype. This difference was apparent even between two countries in Europe, since only 6 of the 78 STs that cause invasive disease in Finland were also found in the Oxford data set. The differences in serotypes between Finland and the United Kingdom are relatively minor, but studies in some developing countries may allow estimates of the invasiveness of serotypes that are rarely encountered in industrialized countries.
In Finland, there were sufficient isolates of serotype 11A to show that this nonvaccine serotype has a low OR for invasive disease; only 1 of the 19 isolates of serotype 11A was from disease with an OR of 0.05. Serotype 35F had an OR of 0.2, which was also significantly below 1. These nonvaccine serotypes therefore appear to be poorly invasive. However, the data also demonstrated the invasive potential of some nonvaccine serotypes. For example, serotype 38 was isolated from six cases of disease but was found in only one episode of carriage and had the highest OR in this study, although there were very wide 95% CIs around this point estimate due to the relatively small numbers of isolates. This nonvaccine serotype may be as capable of causing disease as some of the vaccine serotypes, a finding which is consistent with the results of a recent meta-analysis (3). This serotype was among those implicated in serotype replacement in otitis media in two conjugate vaccine trials conducted in Finland (6, 11), suggesting that its prevalence may increase as a result of widespread vaccination, with similarly adverse consequences for invasive disease.
Previously undetected associations with invasive disease were found for serotypes 19A and 6B. Interestingly, the OR for serotype 6B was significantly greater than that for serotype 6A, with nonoverlapping 95% CIs. Similarly, serotype 19A appeared to be more invasive than serotype 19F, although there was a slight overlap in the 95% CIs. An OR which was higher for serotype 6B than 6A was also observed in a recent meta-analysis (3). This result demonstrates that invasive disease potential may vary markedly within serogroups. Whether this variation is due to differences in the structure of the capsule (which are identical for serotypes 6A and 6B, except for the nature of the linkage between the rhamnose and ribitol sugars [10]) or whether it reflects differences in the genotypes of the clones of these serotypes is unclear.
Neither this study nor the study in the United Kingdom detected significant differences in the ORs of genetically distinct clones of the same serotype. However, taking the results of the two studies together, we may compare ORs of three genetically distinct clones of serotype 14. One of these (ST 124) was found in both Oxford and Finland and had an OR that was significantly greater than 1 in both studies. Interestingly, ST 156, which in Finland was of mixed serotype but was predominantly serotype 14, also had a high OR, as did ST 9 in the United Kingdom study. Thus, three distinct serotype 14 clones which are divergent from each other in overall genotype, having different alleles at six or all seven MLST loci, all have high ORs for invasive disease. However, the ORs of some clones with the same serotype were markedly different (e.g., STs 309 and 485), although this was not significant since the confidence intervals overlapped. Because such clones were present in comparatively small numbers, it is possible that this result reflects a real difference that this study was insufficiently able to detect. More studies are required to firmly establish the relative contribution of capsular type to invasiveness compared to that of the overall genotype of pneumococcal strains.
The point estimate of the OR of ST 156 was the highest observed in the Finnish study. ST 156 is the penicillin-resistant Spain9V-3 clone and was derived from the penicillin-susceptible strain ST 162. By MLST, these clones differ at the ddl locus, but this change almost certainly occurred when ST 162 acquired penicillin resistance due to the very close genetic linkage between ddl and the penicillin-binding protein 2b gene. ST 156 and ST 162 are therefore believed to have essentially the same genotype, and it is interesting that the point estimate for the OR of ST 162, which was most commonly associated with the type 9V capsule, was much lower than that of ST 156, which was mainly serotype 14. Further studies of the ORs of isolates of the same overall genotype, but which differ in serotype, may provide further information on the relative contribution of capsular serotype and overall genotype to the invasiveness of pneumococcal clones. Such studies could be performed using the same study design in a country such as Spain, where both serotypes 9V and 14 variants of the Spain9V-3 clone are commonly encountered.
Several other STs were present in sufficient numbers in Finland to obtain clone-specific ORs. For example, a serotype 19A clone, ST 482, which has as yet been reported only in Finland, showed a highly significant association with invasive disease, whereas ST 485 (serotype 19F) and ST 62 (serotype 11A) were significantly associated with carriage. The serotype 7F clone, ST 191, had an OR of 3.57 and was significantly associated with invasive disease, as was ST 138 (serotype 6B). The latter clone was also present in the Oxford data set, though it was not found to be significantly associated with invasive disease.
The potential for pneumococci to change their capsular locus, and hence their serotype, through recombination has been known for some time (4). Evidence for this occurrence in this data set was limited. While ST 156 and ST 162 were found to express three different capsules, these have all been previously reported. Novel observations were serotypes 23F and 9V isolates of ST 66 and serotypes 19F and 35 isolates of ST 199. The latter ST was also found to express capsular types 15 and 19A in this data set, and the MLST database records further serotype variants of ST199. It is possible that certain lineages of pneumococci are more likely to undergo recombination than others, and further work should investigate this as a matter of urgency, because such strains would be expected to be the most likely to acquire new resistance phenotypes and undergo serotype switching, which could be important following a vaccination campaign.
This work further demonstrates associations between invasive disease and particular serotypes and clones of S. pneumoniae. In particular, serotype 14 isolates of the penicillin-resistant Spain9V-3 clone (ST 156) appear to have a marked predilection to cause invasive disease. There is also evidence that rare serotypes such as type 38 may have a previously undetected potential to cause invasive disease and that even very similar serotypes (such as 6A and 6B) may exhibit significant differences in invasiveness, the biological basis of which is obscure. Further work is required to understand the invasiveness of nonvaccine serotypes, although this is problematic due to their rarity in nonvaccinated populations, and to further explore the relative contributions of serotype and genotype to invasiveness. Such studies are important if conjugate vaccines are introduced into childhood vaccination programs, which may be expected to have a major impact upon the pneumococcal population, and to change the serotypes which are transmitted and which may cause disease within vaccinated communities.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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