Shigella Isolates From the Global Enteric Multicenter Study Inform Vaccine Development

Sofie Livio(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Nancy Strockbine(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Sandra Panchalingam(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Sharon M. Tennant(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Eileen M. Barry(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Mark E. Marohn(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Martín Antonio(Medical Research Council), Ahmed Hossain(International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research), Inácio Mandomando(Manhiça Health Research Centre), John B. Ochieng(Kenya Medical Research Institute), J O Oundo(Kenya Medical Research Institute), Sonia Qureshi(Aga Khan University), Thandavarayan Ramamurthy(National Institute of Cholera and Enteric Diseases), Boubou Tamboura(Centre Pour le Développement des Vaccins-Mali), Richard A. Adegbola(Medical Research Council), M Jahangir Hossain(Medical Research Council), Debasish Saha(Medical Research Council), Sudipta Sen(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Shah M. Faruque(International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research), Pedro L. Alonso(Manhiça Health Research Centre), Robert F. Breiman(Kenya Medical Research Institute), A. Zaidi(Aga Khan University), Dipika Sur(Program for Appropriate Technology in Health), Samba O. Sow(Centre Pour le Développement des Vaccins-Mali), Lynette Y. Berkeley(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Ciara E. O’Reilly(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Eric D. Mintz(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Kajal Biswas(The Coordinating Center), Dani Cohen(Tel Aviv University), Tamer H. Farag(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Dilruba Nasrin(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Yukun Wu(University of Maryland, Baltimore), William C. Blackwelder(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Karen L. Kotloff(University of Maryland, Baltimore), James P. Nataro(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Myron M. Levine(University of Maryland, Baltimore)
Clinical Infectious Diseases
June 23, 2014
Cited by 391Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Shigella, a major diarrheal disease pathogen worldwide, is the target of vaccine development. The Global Enteric Multicenter Study (GEMS) investigated burden and etiology of moderate-to-severe diarrheal disease in children aged <60 months and matched controls without diarrhea during 3 years at 4 sites in Africa and 3 in Asia. Shigella was 1 of the 4 most common pathogens across sites and age strata. GEMS Shigella serotypes are reviewed to guide vaccine development. METHODS: Subjects' stool specimens/rectal swabs were transported to site laboratories in transport media and plated onto xylose lysine desoxycholate and MacConkey agar. Suspect Shigella colonies were identified by biochemical tests and agglutination with antisera. Shigella isolates were shipped to the GEMS Reference Laboratory (Baltimore, MD) for confirmation and serotyping of S. flexneri; one-third of isolates were sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for quality control. RESULTS: Shigella dysenteriae and S. boydii accounted for 5.0% and 5.4%, respectively, of 1130 Shigella case isolates; S. flexneri comprised 65.9% and S. sonnei 23.7%. Five serotypes/subserotypes comprised 89.4% of S. flexneri, including S. flexneri 2a, S. flexneri 6, S. flexneri 3a, S. flexneri 2b, and S. flexneri 1b. CONCLUSIONS: A broad-spectrum Shigella vaccine must protect against S. sonnei and 15 S. flexneri serotypes/subserotypes. A quadrivalent vaccine with O antigens from S. sonnei, S. flexneri 2a, S. flexneri 3a, and S. flexneri 6 can provide broad direct coverage against these most common serotypes and indirect coverage against all but 1 (rare) remaining subserotype through shared S. flexneri group antigens.


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