We determined pneumococcal serotypes in immunocompetent patients who had been admitted to hospital with suspicion of invasive bacterial disease and had confirmed bacteremic pneumococcal pneumonia or meningitis/sepsis determined by molecular detection of Streptococcus pneumoniae in a normally sterile site. Positive samples were serotyped using Realtime-PCR.
Between April 2008 and March 2011, a total of 144 patients (age median 4.1 years; Interquartile range 1.8-5.6) with pneumococcal meningitis/sepsis (n = 43) or pneumonia (n = 101) from 83 participating centers located in 19 of 20 Italian regions were serotyped. The 10 most prevalent serotypes were 1 (29.9%), 3 (16.0%), 19A (13.2%), 7F (8.3%), 5 (4.2%), 14 (4.2%), 6A (3.5%), 6B (3.5%), 18C (3.5%), 19F (3.5%). Overall, serotype coverage for PCV-7, -10 and -13 were respectively 19.4%, 61.8%and 94.4%with no statistical difference between pneumonia and meningitis/sepsis. Potential coverage was similar for children 0-2 or 2-5 years of age. Cultures resulted positive in 35/99 (35.4%) samples simultaneously obtained for both culture and RT-PCR.
These findings indicate that increasing the potential serotype coverage by introducing PCV13 in the vaccination schedule for infancy could provide substantial added benefit for protection from pneumococcal pneumonia or meningitis/sepsis in Italy in children below 2 years as well in older children. The importance of molecular methods for diagnosis and serotyping of invasive pneumococcal disease was confirmed.