1. B Part of It School Leaver Study: A Repeat Cross-Sectional Study to Assess the Impact of Increasing Coverage With Meningococcal B (4CMenB) Vaccine on Carriage of Neisseria meningitidis.
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McMillan, Mark, Koehler, Ann P, Lawrence, Andrew, Sullivan, Thomas R, Bednarz, Jana, MacLennan, Jenny M, Maiden, Martin C J, Ladhani, Shamez N, Ramsay, Mary E, Trotter, Caroline, Borrow, Ray, Finn, Adam, Kahler, Charlene M, Whelan, Jane, Vadivelu, Kumaran, Richmond, Peter C, and Marshall, Helen S
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NEISSERIA meningitidis ,CLINICAL trial registries ,CROSS-sectional method ,POLYMERASE chain reaction ,ODDS ratio ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,MENINGOCOCCAL vaccines ,COMPARATIVE studies ,GRAM-negative aerobic bacteria ,IMPACT of Event Scale ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Background: Recombinant protein-based vaccines targeting serogroup B meningococci protect against invasive disease but impacts on carriage are uncertain. This study assessed carriage prevalence of disease-associated meningococci in 2018-2020 as the proportion of vaccinated adolescents increased following introduction of a school-based 4CMenB immunization program.Methods: Eligible participants who completed high school (aged 17-25) in South Australia in the previous year had an oropharyngeal swab taken and completed a risk factor questionnaire. Disease-associated meningococci (genogroups A, B, C, W, X, Y) were detected by meningococcal and genogroup-specific polymerase chain reaction.Results: The analysis included 4104 participants in 2018, 2690 in 2019, and 1338 in 2020. The proportion vaccinated with 4CMenB increased from 43% in 2018, to 78% in 2019, and 76% in 2020. Carriage prevalence of disease-associated meningococci in 2018 was 225/4104 (5.5%). There was little difference between carriage prevalence in 2019 (134/2690, 5.0%; adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 0.82; 95% confidence interval [CI], .64-1.05) and 2020 (68/1338, 5.1%; aOR, 0.82; 95% CI, .57-1.17) compared to 2018.Conclusions: Increased 4CMenB uptake in adolescents was not associated with decline in carriage of disease-associated meningococci. 4CMenB immunization programs should focus on direct (individual) protection for groups at greatest risk of disease.Clinical Trials Registration: NCT03419533. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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