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Analysis of epidemiological and molecular data from invasive meningococcal disease surveillance in the Czech Republic, 1993–2020


Authors: P. Křížová 1;  M. Honskus 1,2;  Z. Okonji 1;  M. Musílek 1;  J. Kozáková 1
Authors‘ workplace: Národní referenční laboratoř pro meningokokové nákazy, Centrum epidemiologie a mikrobiologie, Státní zdravotní ústav, Praha 1;  3. lékařská fakulta Univerzity Karlovy, Praha 2
Published in: Epidemiol. Mikrobiol. Imunol. 71, 2022, č. 3, s. 148-160
Category: Original Papers

Overview

Aim: An analysis is presented of epidemiological and molecular data from invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) surveillance in the Czech Republic (CR) for 1993–2020, comparing trends in four seven-year periods: 1993–1999, 2000–2006, 2007–2013, and 2014–2020.

Material and Methods: IMD surveillance data are generated by linking National Reference Laboratory for Meningococcal Diseases data and epidemiological data routinely reported to the infectious diseases information systems, with duplicate data removal. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) was used for analysis of selected isolates from IMD cases. In this study, WGS data are analysed on 323 isolates recovered from IMD cases in the Czech Republic between 1993–2020.

Results: Over the entire study period 1993–2020, 2,674 cases were recorded in the IMD surveillance programme, of which 272 were fatal. In the first seven-year period, the highest incidence rate of 2.2/100,000 population was reported in 1995, a gradual decline from 0.8 to 0.6/100,000 was observed in the third period, and in the last period, this decline continued until 2020, achieving a low of 0.2/100,000. In all four study periods, the age group 0-11 months was the most affected, followed by 1–4-year-olds and 15-19-year-olds. Serogroup B caused the highest number of cases (43.6%), followed by serogroups C (34.9%), Y (1.8%), and W (1.5%). Serogroup X was only found in three cases. The overall case fatality rate in the entire study period was 10.2%, with no decline seen in the four periods. The highest case fatality rate was associated with serogroup Y (14.6%), followed by serogroups W (12.5%), C (12.0%), and B (8.1%). In terms of age, the highest case fatality rate was observed in people aged 65+ (24.7%).

The WGS data for 323 IMD isolates from 1993-2020 showed the highest representation of eight clonal complexes: cc11, cc44/41, cc32, cc267, cc23, cc18, cc35, and cc865. Isolates of serogroup C, cc11, from the last study period form two genetically distinct populations with distinct phenotypes that are genetically distant from the lineage of cc11 isolates from the first two periods. The study population included a unique Czech subpopulation of serogroup W isolates (ST-3342, cc865), recorded only in the last two periods (2007–2020), whose position in the phylogenetic network supports the theory that the serogroup W population in the Czech Republic originated from serogroup B isolates as a result of serogroup switch (capsule switch). Clonal complexes cc41/44, cc32, cc267, cc18, and cc35 are predominantly composed of serogroup B isolates, while cc23 includes exclusively serogroup Y isolates.

Conclusions: The analysis of surveillance data over a 28-year period confirms that the vaccination strategy currently used in the Czech Republic, i.e., vaccination of young children and adolescents with a combination of MenB vaccine and quadrivalent conjugate ACWY vaccine, appears to be the most appropriate in the context of the long-term epidemiological situation of IMD in the CR.

Keywords:

surveillance – Neisseria meningitidis – invasive meningococcal disease – whole genome sequencing (WGS) – case fatality rate – serogroup


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Hygiene and epidemiology Medical virology Clinical microbiology
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