Abstract. We examined published studies from the United States,
Europe, and Latin America to better understand geographic and temporal
variability in the epidemiology of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) in young
children. A comparison of IPD incidence levels reported for children <5 years of
age within the United States (CDC) surveillance system over the past 5 years
revealed little variation over that time period. Within the Danish national
surveillance system, a 3-4 fold increase in bacteremic IPD in that age group was
reported over the past 15 years. Nonetheless, the United States IPD incidence
remains 4-8 fold higher than that reported for Denmark or other Western European
countries. A retrospective analysis at one North American hospital spanning 40
years indicated that the seven serogroups represented in the licensed
pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (4, 6, 9, 14, 18, 19, 23) consistently comprised
80%-90% of all serogroups causing IPD in young children. More recent
retrospective comparisons in Spain, the United Kingdom, France, Belgium, and
Denmark suggest modest increases in vaccine serogroup coverage over the past
10-20 years. However, in European children vaccine serogroups consistently
account for 10%-20% less of the overall IPD burden as compared to North American
children. Conclusion: factors that likely underlie a significant
proportion of these apparent temporal and geographic differences include
variability in blood culturing rates, in antibiotic resistance levels, and in
the precise age distributions of the populations studied.
Keywords. Epidemiology - Pneumococcus - Serotypes -
Streptococcus pneumoniae
Abbreviation. IPD invasive pneumococcal disease