47 research outputs found

    Erfaringsgjennomgang etter utvalgte utbrudd av covid-19 i Norge, desember 2020 – mars 2021

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    Source at https://www.fhi.no/Denne rapporten beskriver en erfaringsgjennomgang av utvalgte covid-19 utbrudd i Norge, desember 2020 – mars 2021. Rapporten har blitt ledet av en intern arbeidsgruppe ved Folkehelseinstituttet (FHI) og er gjennomført i samarbeid med Helsedirektoratet, utvalgte kommuner og tilhørende statsforvaltere våren 2021. Hensikten har vært å oppsummere erfaringer og lære underveis, særlig knyttet til håndtering av utbrudd med den engelske virusvarianten og bruk av forsterket TISK (testing, isolering, smittesporing og karantene). Denne prosessen har gitt relevant innsikt

    Circulation of pertussis and poor protection against diphtheria among middle-aged adults in 18 European countries

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    Reported incidence of pertussis in the European Union (EU) and the European Economic Area (EEA) varies and may not reflect the real situation, while vaccine-induced protection against diphtheria and tetanus seems sufficient. We aimed to determine the seroprevalence of DTP antibodies in EU/EEA countries within the age groups of 40-49 and 50-59 years. Eighteen countries collected around 500 samples between 2015 and 2018 (N = 10,302) which were analysed for IgG-DTP specific antibodies. The proportion of sera with pertussis toxin antibody levels ≥100 IU/mL, indicative of recent exposure to pertussis was comparable for 13/18 countries, ranging between 2.7-5.8%. For diphtheria the proportion of sera lacking the protective level (</p

    Pneumococcal vaccination in older adults in the era of childhood vaccination: Public health insights from a Norwegian statistical prediction study

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    Two different vaccines, a 23-valent polysaccharide vaccine (PPV23) and a 13-valent conjugate vaccine (PCV13), are available for prevention of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) in the population aged 65 years and older (65+). The IPD epidemiology in the 65+ is undergoing change due to indirect effects of childhood immunisation. Vaccine recommendations for the 65+ must take into account these trends in epidemiology. We therefore explored the preventive potential of vaccination strategies to prevent IPD in the 65+, including PPV23, PCV13 or PCV13 + PPV23 in 2014–2019. Quasi-Poisson regression models were fitted to 2004–2014 population-wide surveillance data and used to predict incidences for vaccine-type and non-vaccine type IPD. We determined the number of people needed to be vaccinated to prevent one case per season (NNV) for each strategy and estimated the public health impact on the IPD case counts from increasing the vaccine uptake to 28–45%. Our results indicate that PCV13-IPD will decrease by 71% from 58 (95% prediction interval 55–61) cases in 2014/15 to 17 (6–52) in 2018/19 and PPV23-IPD by 32% from 168 (162–175) to 115 (49–313) cases. The NNV will increase over time for all strategies because of a decreasing vaccine-type IPD incidence. In 2018/19, the PCV13-NNV will be 5.3 times higher than the PPV23-NNV. Increasing the vaccine uptake will lead to a larger public health impact for all scenarios. Combining PCV13 and PPV23 is most effective, but the additional effect of PCV13 will decrease and is only marginal in 2018/19. Our study demonstrates the importance of increasing PPV23 uptake and of developing vaccines that confer broader immunity

    Antimicrobial susceptibility and clonality of Streptococcus pneumoniae isolates recovered from invasive disease cases during a period with changes in pneumococcal childhood vaccination, Norway, 2004–2016

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    Changes in pneumococcal antimicrobial resistance (AMR) have been reported following use of pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCVs) in childhood vaccination programmes. We describe AMR trends and clonality in Norway during 2004–2016; we studied 10,239 invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) isolates in terms of serotypes, antimicrobial susceptibility, and for a systematically collected subset of 2473 isolates, multilocus sequence types (ST). The IPD cases were notified to the Norwegian Surveillance System for Communicable Diseases and pneumococcal isolates were collected through the National Reference Laboratory for Pneumococci. The cases are sourced from the entire Norwegian population. We supplemented the IPD isolates with isolates from carriage studies in children attending day-care, performed in 2006 (before mass childhood vaccination with PCV7), 2008 (2 years after PCV7 introduction), 2013 (2 years after the transition to PCV13), and 2015. IPD cases were 0–102 years old; median 64 years. Carriage study participants were typically aged 1–5 years. Overall, AMR was low; a maximum of 7% of IPD isolates were resistant, depending on the antimicrobial. Erythromycin and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole resistant IPD (ERY-R and SXT-R, respectively) decreased in the PCV7 period (2006–2010). In the PCV13 period (2011–2016) however, we saw an indication of increased non-susceptibility among IPD isolates. This increase was mainly due to non-vaccine serotypes 15A-ST63 (multidrug resistant), 24F-ST162 (SXT-R), 23B-ST2372 (penicillin non-susceptible and SXT-R) and 33F (ERY-R and clindamycin resistant). Resistant or non-susceptible IPD isolates were often clones introduced into Norway during the study period. The exception was ERY-R isolates; initially, these largely consisted of an established serotype 14-ST9 clone, which disappeared after introducing PCV7. The carriage study results mostly resembled the changes seen in IPD with a maximum of 9% of the participants per study carrying resistant pneumococci. As actual PCVs are not fully limiting AMR, higher-valency vaccines and prudent use of antimicrobials are still needed to temper pneumococcal AMR
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