Invasive pneumococcal strain distributions and isolate clusters associated with persons experiencing homelessness during 2018.
2020
OBJECTIVES We aimed to characterize invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) isolates collected from multistate surveillance in the USA during 2018 and examine within-serotype propensities of isolates to form related clusters. METHODS We predicted strain features using whole genome sequence obtained from 2885 IPD isolates obtained through the Center for Disease Control and Prevention's Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs) that has a surveillance population of approximately 34.5 million individuals distributed among 10 states. Phylogenetic analysis was provided for serotypes accounting for >27 isolates. RESULTS Thirteen-valent conjugate vaccine (PCV13) serotypes together with 6C accounted for 23/105 (21.9%) of isolates from children aged 5 years. The most common serotypes from adult IPD isolates were serotypes 3 (413/2780, 14.9%), 22F (291/2780, 10.5%) and 9N (191/2780, 6.9%). Among children IPD isolates, serotypes 15BC (18/105, 17.1%), 3 (11/105, 10.5%) and 33F (10/105, 9.5%) were most common. Serotypes 4, 12F, 20, and 7F had the highest proportions of isolates that formed related clusters together with highest proportions of isolates from persons experiencing homelessness (PEH). Among 84 isolates from long-term care facilities, two instances of highly related isolate pairs from co-residents were identified. CONCLUSIONS Non-PCV13 serotypes accounted for more than 70% of IPD in ABCs, however PCV13 serotype 3 is the most common IPD serotype overall. Serotypes most common among PEH were more often associated with temporally related clusters identified both among PEH and among persons not reportedly experiencing homelessness.
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