1. Effectiveness of a serogroup B outer membrane vesicle meningococcal vaccine against gonorrhoea: a retrospective observational study
- Author
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Winston E Abara, Kyle T Bernstein, Felicia M T Lewis, Julia A Schillinger, Kristen Feemster, Preeti Pathela, Susan Hariri, Aras Islam, Michael Eberhart, Iris Cheng, Alexandra Ternier, Jennifer Sanderson Slutsker, Sarah Mbaeyi, Robbie Madera, and Robert D Kirkcaldy
- Subjects
Meningococcal Infections ,Gonorrhea ,Infectious Diseases ,Drug Resistance, Bacterial ,Vaccination ,Humans ,Meningococcal Vaccines ,Chlamydia Infections ,Neisseria meningitidis, Serogroup B ,Serogroup ,Article ,Neisseria gonorrhoeae - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Declining antimicrobial susceptibility to current gonorrhoea antibiotic treatment and inadequate treatment options have raised the possibility of untreatable gonorrhoea. New prevention approaches, such as vaccination, are needed. Outer membrane vesicle meningococcal serogroup B vaccines might be protective against gonorrhoea. We evaluated the effectiveness of a serogroup B meningococcal outer membrane vesicle vaccine (MenB-4C) against gonorrhoea in individuals aged 16–23 years in two US cities. METHODS: We identified laboratory-confirmed gonorrhoea and chlamydia infections among individuals aged 16–23 years from sexually transmitted infection surveillance records in New York City and Philadelphia from 2016 to 2018. We linked gonorrhoea and chlamydia case records to immunisation registry records to determine MenB-4C vaccination status at infection, defined as complete vaccination (two MenB-4C doses administered 30–180 days apart), partial vaccination (single MenB-4C vaccine dose), or no vaccination (serogroup B meningococcal vaccine naive). Using log-binomial regression with generalised estimating equations to account for correlations between multiple infections per patient, we calculated adjusted prevalence ratios (APR) and 95% CIs to determine if vaccination was protective against gonorrhoea. We used individual-level data for descriptive analyses and infection-level data for regression analyses. FINDINGS: Between Jan 1, 2016, and Dec 31, 2018, we identified 167 706 infections (18 099 gonococcal infections, 124 876 chlamydial infections, and 24 731 gonococcal and chlamydial co-infections) among 109 737 individuals linked to the immunisation registries. 7692 individuals were vaccinated, of whom 4032 (52·4%) had received one dose, 3596 (46·7%) two doses, and 64 (
- Published
- 2022