The impact of introduction of the 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine on pneumococcal carriage in Nigeria

Aishatu L Adamu ORCID logo; J Ojal ORCID logo; Isa AAbubakar; Kofo AOdeyemi; Musa MBello; Christy ANOkoromah; BonifaceKaria; AngelaKarani; DonaldAkech; VictorInem; +2 more... J Anthony G Scott ORCID logo; Ifedayo MO Adetifa ORCID logo; (2023) The impact of introduction of the 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine on pneumococcal carriage in Nigeria. Nature communications, 14 (1). p. 2666. ISSN 2041-1723 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-38277-z
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Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCVs) protect against invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) among vaccinees. However, at population level, this protection is driven by indirect effects. PCVs prevent nasopharyngeal acquisition of vaccine-serotype (VT) pneumococci, reducing onward transmission. Each disease episode is preceded by infection from a carrier, so vaccine impacts on carriage provide a minimum estimate of disease reduction in settings lacking expensive IPD surveillance. We documented carriage prevalence and vaccine coverage in two settings in Nigeria annually (2016-2020) following PCV10 introduction in 2016. Among 4,684 rural participants, VT carriage prevalence fell from 21 to 12% as childhood (<5 years) vaccine coverage rose from 7 to 84%. Among 2,135 urban participants, VT carriage prevalence fell from 16 to 9% as uptake rose from 15 to 94%. Within these ranges, carriage prevalence declined with uptake. Increasing PCV10 coverage reduced pneumococcal infection at all ages, implying at least a comparable reduction in IPD.



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