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1 December 2007

Volume 45, Number 11
Clinical Infectious Diseases 2007;45:1427–1434
1058-4838/2007/4511-0005$15.00
DOI: 10.1086/522984
CSE THEME ARTICLE MAJOR ARTICLE

Pneumococcal Carriage among Indigenous Warao Children in Venezuela: Serotypes, Susceptibility Patterns, and Molecular Epidemiology

Ismar A. Rivera‐Olivero,1

Debby Bogaert,3,5

Teresita Bello,1

Berenice del Nogal,2

Marcel Sluijter,3

Peter W. M. Hermans,4 and

Jacobus H. de Waard1

1Laboratorio de Tuberculosis, Instituto de Biomedicina, Hospital Vargas, and 2Departamento de Pediatria, Hospital de Niños “J.M. de Los Rios”, Caracas, Venezuela; 3Department of Pediatrics, Erasmus MC–Sophia, Rotterdam, and 4Department of Pediatrics, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen, The Netherlands; and 5Department of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts

Little attention has been paid to pneumococcal carriage and disease in Amerindians from Latin America. The Warao people, an indigenous population from Venezuela, live in the delta of the Orinoco River in geographically isolated communities with difficult access to medical care. To obtain insight into pneumococcal carriage and the theoretical coverage of pneumococcal vaccines in this population, we investigated pneumococcal colonization, serotype, and genotype distribution among Warao children in 9 distinct, geographically isolated communities in the Delta Amacuro area in the northeast of Venezuela. From April 2004 through January 2005, a total of 161 Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates were recovered from single nasopharyngeal swab samples obtained from 356 children aged 0–72 months. The overall pneumococcal carriage rate was 49%, ranging from 13% to 76%, depending on the community investigated and the age of the children (50% among children aged <2 years and 25% among children aged >2 years). The most frequent serotypes were 23F (19.5% of isolates), 6A (19.5%), 15B (10.4%), 6B (9.1%), and 19F (7.2%). The theoretical coverage of the 7‐valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, including the cross‐reactive nonvaccine serotype 6A, was 65%. A total of 26% of the isolates were resistant to first‐line antibiotics, with 70% of these strains being covered by the 7‐valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine. Restriction fragment end labelling analysis revealed 65 different genotypes, with 125 (80%) of the isolates belonging to 27 different genetic clusters, suggesting a high degree of horizontal spread of pneumococcal strains in and between the villages. The high colonization rates and high (registered) acute respiratory tract infection morbidity and mortality in this part of Venezuela suggest that Warao children are at increased risk for pneumococcal disease and, therefore, benefit from vaccination.

Received 1 June 2007; accepted 3 June 2007; electronically published 22 October 2007.

Reprints or correspondence: Dr. Jacobus H. de Waard, Laboratorio de Tuberculosis, Instituto de Biomedicina, Hospital Vargas, San José, Caracas, Venezuela ().

CSE Global Theme Issue on Poverty and Human Development

Cited by

I. A. Rivera-Olivero, M. Blommaart, D. Bogaert, P. W. M. Hermans, J. H. de Waard. (2009) Multiplex PCR reveals a high rate of nasopharyngeal pneumococcal 7-valent conjugate vaccine serotypes co-colonizing indigenous Warao children in Venezuela. Journal of Medical Microbiology 58:5, 584-587
Online publication date: 1-Jun-2009.
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