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AbstractBackgroundThe ten-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV10) was introduced in Nepal in 2015. We compared the nasopharyngeal carriage of PCV10and non-PCV10 serotypesof pneumococcusbetween pre-vaccine (2014-2015) and post-vaccine (2016-2019) years in two different regions of Nepal.MethodsNasopharyngeal samples obtained in healthy Nepalese children aged 6-59 months in urban (Patan, Kathmandu) and 6-23 months in rural (Okhaldhunga) settings were transported in STGG (Skim Milk-Tryptone-Glucose-Glycerol) media, cultured for pneumococcus and serotyped by the Quellung method.ResultsPCV10-type prevalence decreased from 27.67% in rural and 19.08% in urban children pre-vaccine to 9.73% and 9.18% post-vaccine, respectively. Pre-vaccine, the most frequently found serotypes in both settings were 19F, 6B, 14. Post-vaccine, the non-PCV10 serotypes were more common. Significant increases were observed in additional PCV13 serotypes 3, and 19A, in both settings. In addition, in the urban setting, non-vaccine serotypes 15C, 34, 13, 23B and 33B increased, whereas, serotypes 10A, 23A and 33F increased in the rural setting. The carriage prevalence has decreased for most of the PCV10-type serotypes in both the settings except 7F, 9V, 4 and 5, which did not show significant decrease.ConclusionSince the introduction of PCV10, carriage prevalence of most of the PCV10 serotypes have reduced and non-PCV10 serotypes have increased in both settings. However, due to increase in non-PCV10 serotypes, replacement disease may occur in the future. Thus continued monitoring of changes in the nasopharyngeal carriage of vaccine type pneumococcal serotypes is important when assessing vaccine impact.DisclosuresAll Authors: No reported disclosures

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1093/ofid/ofaf695.1657

Type

Journal article

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Publication Date

2026-01-11T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

13

Keywords

Minority Health, Vaccine Related, Pneumonia & Influenza, Pediatric Research Initiative, Infection, Infectious Diseases, 3202 Clinical Sciences, Prevention, Health Disparities and Racial or Ethnic Minority Health Research, Clinical Research, Immunization, Pneumonia, Lung, Rural Health, Health Disparities, 3.4 Vaccines, 3 Good Health and Well Being, Biotechnology, 32 Biomedical and Clinical Sciences