Litcius/Paper detail

Decline in Pneumococcal Disease in Young Children During the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Pandemic in Israel Associated With Suppression of Seasonal Respiratory Viruses, Despite Persistent Pneumococcal Carriage: A Prospective Cohort Study

Dana Danino, Shalom Ben‐Shimol, Bart Adriaan van der Beek, Noga Givon‐Lavi, Yonat Shemer Avni, David Greenberg, Daniel M. Weinberger, Ron Dagan

2021Clinical Infectious Diseases205 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The incidence of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) declined during the COVID-19 pandemic. Previous studies hypothesized that this was due to reduced pneumococcal transmission resulting from nonpharmaceutical interventions. We used multiple ongoing cohort surveillance projects in children <5 years to test this hypothesis. METHODS: The first SARS-CoV-2 cases were detected in February 2020, resulting in a full lockdown, followed by several partial restrictions. Data from ongoing surveillance projects captured the incidence dynamics of community-acquired alveolar pneumonia (CAAP), nonalveolar lower respiratory infections necessitating chest X-rays (NA-LRIs), nasopharyngeal pneumococcal carriage in nonrespiratory visits, nasopharyngeal respiratory virus detection (by polymerase chain reaction), and nationwide IPD. Monthly rates (January 2020 through February 2021 vs mean monthly rates 2016-2019 [expected rates]) adjusted for age and ethnicity were compared. RESULTS: CAAP and bacteremic pneumococcal pneumonia were strongly reduced (incidence rate ratios [IRRs]: .07 and .19, respectively); NA-LRIs and nonpneumonia IPD were also reduced by a lesser magnitude (IRRs: .46 and .42, respectively). In contrast, pneumococcal carriage prevalence was only slightly reduced, and density of colonization and pneumococcal serotype distributions were similar to previous years. The decline in pneumococcus-associated disease was temporally associated with a full suppression of respiratory syncytial virus, influenza viruses, and human metapneumovirus, often implicated as co-pathogens with pneumococcus. In contrast, adenovirus, rhinovirus, and parainfluenza activities were within or above expected levels. CONCLUSIONS: Reductions in pneumococcal and pneumococcus-associated diseases occurring during the COVID-19 pandemic in Israel were not predominantly related to reduced pneumococcal carriage and density but were strongly associated with the disappearance of specific respiratory viruses.

Topics & Concepts

CarriageMedicinePandemicPneumococcal diseaseVirologyDiseaseCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)CohortRespiratory diseaseCoronavirusCohort studyProspective cohort studyViral diseaseStreptococcus pneumoniaeImmunologyVirusInfectious disease (medical specialty)Internal medicineBiologyMicrobiologyPathologyLungAntibioticsPneumonia and Respiratory InfectionsRespiratory viral infections researchImmune responses and vaccinations