For a seven year period clinical and epidemiological data were prospectively collected on children aged <10 years with microbiologically confirmed invasive Haemophilus influenzae type b infection in the Oxford region to study the epidemiology of the disease and determine the potential impact of early primary immunisation in infints. Computer records of primary immunisations given to these cases were retrospectively analysed and, where necessary, hospital and general practitioner records were searched to determine the immunisation history.
SUMMARYThis survey defined the pattern of invasive Haemophilus influenzae infections during 1990-2 in six regions in England and Wales during the pre-vaccination era providing a baseline against which any changes in patterns of disease due to the introduction of the Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccination programme can be monitored. A total of 946 cases of invasive Haemophilus influenzae were recorded during the survey period of which almost 90 % were due to type b and most of the remainder were non-typeable. Type b infections occurred predominantly in children less than 5 years of age (88 %) with the highest attack rate in male infants in the 6-11 month age group. Diagnostic category varied with both age and serotype; meningitis was the commonest presentation overall but pneumonia and bacteraemia were more common in adults and non-typeable isolates. Mortality was highest in neonates and the elderly (over 65 years of age) who were more likely to have an underlying predisposing condition than older children and adults. Children under 5 years of age had a higher case fatality rate for non-typeable than for type b infections. Ampicillin resistance was 15 % and there were no cefotaxime resistant type b isolates.
Three epidemiologically unrelated clusters of Haemophilus influenzae resistant to ampicillin, chloramphenicol, and tetracycline were studied. The biotypes and cell-envelope protein patterns were determined for 17 nonencapsulated strains, 6 from Dundee and 11 from Cheltenham, and for 6 type b encapsulated strains from Guildford. After mobilization by conjugation, large 32- to 36-MDa plasmids were purified from all the strains. The restriction fragment patterns of the plasmids were determined by ethidium bromide staining of digested purified plasmid or by Southern hybridization of digested total cellular DNA of the parent strains, probed with purified plasmid. Evidence is presented for a chromosomal location of the plasmids in the parent strains, the spread in nature of a plasmid between distinguishable strains of H. influenzae, the person-to-person spread of a strain within a cluster, and a high degree of sequence homology between distinguishable plasmids, implying their close relatedness.
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