Disease rates are high among indigenous persons in Arctic countries, and PCV7 has resulted in decreased rates in North American children.
The International Circumpolar Surveillance System is a population-based surveillance network for invasive bacterial disease in the Arctic. The 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7) was introduced for routine infant vaccination in Alaska (2001), northern Canada (2002–2006), and Norway (2006). Data for invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) were analyzed to identify clinical findings, disease rates, serotype distribution, and antimicrobial drug susceptibility; 11,244 IPD cases were reported. Pneumonia and bacteremia were common clinical findings. Rates of IPD among indigenous persons in Alaska and northern Canada were 43 and 38 cases per 100,000 population, respectively. Rates in children <2 years of age ranged from 21 to 153 cases per 100,000 population. In Alaska and northern Canada, IPD rates in children <2 years of age caused by PCV7 serotypes decreased by >80% after routine vaccination. IPD rates are high among indigenous persons and children in Arctic countries. After vaccine introduction, IPD caused by non-PCV7 serotypes increased in Alaska.
The International Circumpolar Surveillance (ICS) project was established in 1999 to create an infectious disease surveillance network throughout Arctic countries and territories. The project initially focused on invasive bacterial diseases caused by
IPD was of interest to the ICS in part because it is one of the leading causes of pneumonia and meningitis among indigenous persons of the circumpolar north. Incidence rates of IPD are higher among indigenous persons than among nonindigenous persons (
We analyzed IPD data collected from January 1999 through December 2005. The purpose of the study was to determine rates of disease by country, common clinical findings, risk factors, serotype distribution, antimicrobial drug susceptibility patterns, and changes in disease rates with vaccine use.
In the participating regions, clinical laboratories send
| Characteristic | Alaska | Northern Canada | Greenland | Iceland | Norway | Northern Sweden | Finland |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean population | 641,720 | 132,956 | 56,617 | 288,035 | 4,565,943 | 252,729 | 5,215,791 |
| % Indigenous | 19 | 59 | Unknown | Unknown | <1 | <5 | <1 |
| Region size, km2 | 1,518,807 | 4,506,600 | 2,131,863 | 102,968 | 323,760 | 160,580 | 339,290 |
| No. participating laboratories | 23 | 14 | 15 | 10 | 33 | 1 | 23 |
| Location of reference laboratories | Anchorage | Edmonton, Montreal, Winnipeg | Nuuk, Copenhagen | Reykjavik | Oslo, Tromso | Stockholm | Oulu |
Population distribution and land area vary widely among participating regions. Populations range from ≈57,000 persons in Greenland to >5 million persons in Finland. Land areas range from 102,968 km2 for Iceland to 4,506,600 km2 for northern Canada (
A case-patient with IPD was defined as a resident of the surveillance area from whom
Initial identification of a case of IPD results in a report to local public health personnel who complete standardized data collection forms (bacterial disease surveillance form [BDSF]) that include demographic, clinical, and risk factor information, and pertinent immunization history (
End of year summary data are submitted electronically to the ICS coordinator at AIP in Anchorage, where they are entered into a database. Greenland and Iceland use the BDSF. Norway, northern Sweden, and Finland use other instruments.
Isolates were serotyped by the Quellung reaction (Alaska, northern Canada, Greenland, Norway, and northern Sweden), counter-immunoelectrophoresis (Finland), or coagglutination (Iceland). Antimicrobial drug susceptibility testing was performed by microbroth dilution (Alaska and northern Canada), agar dilution (Greenland and Finland), or disk diffusion (Iceland, Norway, and northern Sweden). A laboratory quality control program has been in place since the program’s inception (
Data were double-entered into Paradox version 10.0 (Corel, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada), and analyzed by using EpiInfo version 6.04b (CDC, Atlanta, GA, USA), SAS version 8.0 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA), and StatXact version 6.0 (Cytel Corporation, Cambridge, MA, USA). For Alaska, we compared disease rates by using 1999–2000 as the baseline period and 2001–2005 as the postvaccine period. For northern Canada, we used 1999–2002 as the baseline period and 2003–2005 as the vaccine implementation period. Standardized incidence rates were reported by using World Health Organization 2000 population standard and the age groups of
Over the 7-year surveillance period, 11,244 cases of IPD were detected among the 7 participating countries; 4,921 (53%) were in male patients. Of the 5,896 case-patients for whom outcome was reported, 569 died (case-fatality rate 10%). Median age of case-patients was 57 years and varied by country (
| Characteristic | Alaska, 1999–2005, n = 769 | Northern Canada, 1999–2005, n = 251 | Greenland, 2000–2005, n = 69 | Iceland, 2000–2005, n = 274 | Norway, 2000–2005, n = 5,744 | Northern Sweden, 2003–2005, n = 88 | Finland, 2000–2005, n = 4,049 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median age (range) | 41.6 (1 mo–100 y) | 30.2 (0 mo– 83 y) | 44.7 (0 mo–91 y) | 53.2 (1 mo–98 y) | 63.2 (0 mo–99 y) | 65.8 (9 mo–98 y) | 54.2 (0 mo–100 y) |
| No. males (%) | 423 (55) | 149 (60) | 37 (54) | 145 (53) | 2,856 (50) | 40 (45) | 2,271 (56) |
| No. indigenous (%) | 372 (48) | 191 (84)† | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| No. hospitalized (%) | 585 (77)‡ | 201 (87)‡ | 62 (100)‡ | NA | 5,567 (99)‡ | NA | NA |
| Duration of hospitalization, d, median (minimum–maximum) | 4 (0–188) | 5 (0–77) | 9 (0–131) | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| No. deaths (%) | 96 (13)§ | 11 (5)§ | 13 (20)§ | 30 (27)§ | 419 (9)§ | NA | NA |
*NA, not available. †Ethnicity data missing from 24 (northern Canada) cases. Denominator = 227. ‡Hospitalization data missing for 9 (Alaska), 21 (northern Canada), 7 (Greenland), and 127 (Norway) cases. Denominators are 760, 230, 62, and 5,617, respectively. §Death information missing for 10 (Alaska), 21 (northern Canada), 3 (Greenland), 161 (Iceland), and 1,1016 (Norway) cases. Denominators are 759, 230, 66, 113, and 4,728, respectively.
| Statistic or age group | Greenland (2000–2005) | Iceland (2000–2005) | Norway (2000–2005) | Northern Sweden (2003–2005) | Finland (2000–2005) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total no. cases | 69 | 274 | 5,744 | 88 | 4,049 |
| Age-specific annualized incidence rates (no. cases) | |||||
| <2 y | 77.4 (8) | 89.8 (45) | 50.0 (355) | 21.1 (3) | 52.3 (367) |
| 2–19 y | 4.8 (5) | 6.8 (32) | 4.9 (312) | 0.0 (0) | 5.0 (346) |
| 20–64 y | 25.5 (53) | 8.9 (90) | 14.5 (2,352) | 9.3 (41) | 10.9 (2,057) |
| 16.6 (3) | 53.1 (107) | 66.7 (2,725) | 30.9 (44) | 26.6 (1,279) | |
| Crude annualized incidence (all ages) | 20.3 | 15.9 | 21.0 | 11.6 | 12.9 |
| Annualized age standardized incidence† | 19.8 | 14.6 | 16.2 | 9.1 | 11.6 |
*IPD, invasive pneumococcal disease, †Rates adjusted to 2000 World Health Organization world standard population estimates.
Annualized age-specific incidence rates over the entire surveillance period were highest in children <2 years of age and the elderly (
| Group | Alaska | Northern Canada | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prevaccine (1999–2000) | Postvaccine (2001–2005) | p value | Prevaccine (1999–2002) | Vaccine implementation (2003–2005) | p value | ||
| Total no. cases | 257 | 512 | NA | 165 | 86 | NA | |
| All ages, y | 20.6 (257) | 15.8 (512) | 0.0004 | 31.0 (165) | 21.6 (86) | 0.007 | |
| <2 | 173.5 (69) | 79.2 (82) | <0.0001 | 185.6 (36) | 110.0 (16) | 0.10 | |
| 2–19 | 10.7 (40) | 6.6 (64) | 0.02 | 22.9 (41) | 9.7 (13) | 0.009 | |
| 20–64 | 13.7 (104) | 14.1 (278) | 0.82 | 23.8 (74) | 18.8 (44) | 0.24 | |
| 57.9 (44) | 44.5 (88) | 0.17 | 64.4 (14) | 73.5 (12) | 0.84 | ||
| Indigenous, all ages | 56.0 (133) | 38.1 (239) | 0.0003 | 44.2 (134) | 25.0 (57) | 0.0005 | |
| <2 y | 440.6 (47) | 177.5 (50) | <0.0001 | 229.3 (33) | 92.6 (10) | 0.01 | |
| Nonindigenous, all ages | 12.3 (124) | 10.4 (273) | 0.13 | 9.6 (20) | 10.2 (16) | 0.86 | |
| <2 y | 75.7 (22) | 42.5 (32) | 0.05 | 65.4 (3) | 87.2 (3) | 1.00 | |
| PCV 7 serotypes (4, 6B, 9V, 14, 18C, 19F, 23F)† | |||||||
| All ages, y | 9.6 (120) | 3.4 (110) | <0.0001 | 12.6 (67) | 3.8 (15) | <0.0001 | |
| <2 | 128.3 (51) | 15.5 (16) | <0.0001 | 128.9 (25) | 20.6 (3) | 0.0008 | |
| 2–19 | 5.6 (21) | 1.6 (16) | 0.0003 | 8.4 (15) | 1.5 (2) | 0.01 | |
| 20–64 | 4.1 (31) | 2.8 (55) | 0.09 | 7.1 (22) | 1.7 (4) | 0.005 | |
| ≥65 | 22.4 (17) | 11.6 (23) | 0.05 | 23.0 (5) | 36.8 (6) | 0.55 | |
| Indigenous, all ages | 24.9 (59) | 4.9 (31) | <0.0001 | 17.1 (52) | 3.5 (8) | <0.0001 | |
| <2 y | 318.7 (34) | 21.3 (6) | <0.0001 | 159.8 (23) | 9.3 (1) | 0.0001 | |
| Nonindigenous, all ages | 6.0 (61) | 3.0 (79) | <0.0001 | 6.2 (13) | 3.2 (5) | 0.24 | |
| <2 y | 58.5 (17) | 13.3 (10) | <0.0001 | 43.6 (2) | 29.1 (1) | 1.00 | |
| Non-PCV7 serotypes† | |||||||
| All ages, y | 8.3 (104) | 10.5 (341) | 0.04 | 17.1 (91) | 16.8 (67) | 0.94 | |
| <2 | 27.7 (11) | 59.0 (61) | 0.03 | 41.2 (8) | 75.6 (11) | 0.25 | |
| 2–19 | 3.5 (13) | 4.1 (40) | 0.65 | 14.5 (26) | 7.4 (10) | 0.09 | |
| 20–64 | 7.3 (55) | 9.6 (189) | 0.07 | 15.4 (48) | 16.7 (39) | 0.75 | |
| | 32.9 (25) | 25.8 (51) | 0.31 | 41.4 (9) | 36.8 (6) | 1.00 | |
| Indigenous, all ages | 20.2 (48) | 29.8 (187) | 0.01 | 25.4 (77) | 20.2 (46) | 0.24 | |
| <2 y | 65.6 (7) | 145.6 (41) | 0.05 | 48.6 (7) | 74.1 (8) | 0.44 | |
| Nonindigenous, all ages | 5.5 (56) | 5.9 (154) | 0.71 | 2.9 (6) | 7.0 (11) | 0.09 | |
| <2 y | 13.8 (4) | 26.6 (20) | 0.26 | 21.8 (1) | 58.1 (2) | 0.58 | |
| Penicillin nonsusceptible IPD, all serotypes‡ | |||||||
| All ages | 4.0 (50) | 2.1 (68) | 0.0004 | 1.5 (8) | 0.8 (3) | 0.37 | |
| <2 y | 62.9 (25) | 21.3 (22) | <0.0001 | 10.3 (2) | 0.0 (0) | 0.51 | |
| Cotrimoxazole nonsusceptible IPD, all serotypes‡ | |||||||
| All ages | 5.6 (70) | 3.0 (96) | 0.0003 | 2.6 (14) | 1.8 (7) | 0.50 | |
| <2 y | 90.5 (36) | 25.1 (26) | <0.0001 | 15.5 (3) | 13.7 (2) | 1.00 | |
*IPD, invasive pneumococcal disease, PCV7, 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine; NA, not available. Values in parentheses are no. cases. †Serotype available for 675 (88%) of 769 Alaska isolates and 240 (96%) of 251 Northern Canada isolates. ‡Antimicrobial drug susceptibility available for 677 (88%) of 769 Alaska isolates and 236 (94%) of 251 northern Canada isolates.
Race and ethnicity data were only available from Alaska and northern Canada. Over the entire surveillance period, annualized rates of disease were higher in Alaska Native (indigenous) persons (43.1 cases/100,000/year) than in nonindigenous persons (9.8 cases) (relative risk [RR] 4.4, 95% confidence interval [CI] 3.8–5.1). Increased risk for IPD was similar in northern Canada (RR 3.6, 95% CI 2.6, 5.2) with an annualized overall rate of 36.0 cases/100,000 among Canadian indigenous persons and 9.9 cases/100,000 among nonindigenous persons. Among children <2 years of age, increased RR for indigenous versus nonindigenous children was 6.5 in Alaska (95% CI 4.5, 9.4; indigenous 249.9 cases/100,000/year, nonindigenous 38.3 cases/100,000/year) and 2.3 in Canada (95% CI 1.0, 5.2; indigenous 170.7 cases/100,000/year, nonindigenous 74.7 cases/100,000/year).
In Alaska, incidence of IPD among all age groups decreased from 20.6 cases in the prevaccine period (1999–2000) to 15.8 cases/100,000 persons in the postvaccine period (2001–2005; p = 0.0004). Among Alaskan children <2 years of age, incidence of IPD decreased from 173.5 cases in the pre–conjugate vaccine period to 79.2 cases/100,000 children in the postvaccine period (p<0.0001). Similarly, in northern Canada, incidence of IPD among all age groups decreased from 31.0 cases/100,000 persons in the prevaccine period (1999–2002) to 21.6 cases/100,000 persons in the vaccine implementation period (2003–2005; p = 0.007) (
Annual invasive pneumococcal disease rates among children <2 years of age by International Circumpolar Surveillance System member country, 1999–2005. The p values are for trend.
In Alaska, incidence of IPD among all indigenous persons decreased from 56.0 cases/100,000 persons in the pre–conjugate vaccine period (1999–2000) to 38.1 cases/100,000 persons in the postvaccine period (2001–2005; p = 0.0003). Among Alaskan indigenous children <2 years of age, incidence decreased from 440.6 in the pre–conjugate vaccine period to 177.5 in the postvaccine period (p<0.0001). Similarly, in northern Canada, incidence of IPD among indigenous persons decreased from 44.2 cases/100,000 persons in the prevaccine period (1999–2002) to 25.0 cases/100,000 persons in the vaccine implementation period (2003–2005; p = 0.0005). Among Canadian indigenous children <2 years of age, incidence decreased from 229.3/100,000 persons in the prevaccine period to 92.6/100,000 persons in the vaccine implementation period (2003–2005; p = 0.01) (
In Alaska, the incidence of serotypes contained in PCV7 in all age groups decreased from 9.6 cases/100,000 persons in the pre–conjugate vaccine period (1999–2000) to 3.4 cases/100,000 persons in the postvaccine period (2001–2005; p<0.0001). PCV7 serotype–specific incidence among Alaska children <2 years decreased from 128.3 cases/100,000 persons in the pre–conjugate vaccine period to 15.5 cases/100,000 persons in the postvaccine period (p<0.0001). Among older age groups in Alaska (2–19, 20–64, and
In Alaska, non-PCV7 serotype–specific incidence among all age groups increased from 8.3 cases/100,000 persons in the pre–conjugate vaccine period (1999–2000) to 10.5 cases/100,000 persons in the postvaccine period (2001–2005; p = 0.04). Non-PCV7 serotype–specific incidence among Alaskan children <2 years of age increased from 27.7 cases/100,000 children in the pre–conjugate vaccine period to 59.0 cases/100,000 children in the postvaccine period (p = 0.03). In northern Canada, non-PCV7 serotype–specific incidence among all age groups remained relatively stable at 17.1 cases/100,000 persons in the prevaccine period (1999–2002) and 16.8 cases/100,000 persons in the vaccine implementation period (2003–2005; p = 0.94) (
IPD rates among children <2 years of age increased in Norway and Finland (p<0.01 and p = 0.04, respectively). A slight increase was also seen in Iceland, but this increase was not statistically significant (p = 0.56). Because of low numbers of cases, rates in Greenland were unstable but showed no statistically significant change (
Several serotypes were common among Arctic countries participating in ICS, including 14, 4, 7F, and 6B. Among the 4 most prevalent serotypes in the Arctic, 3 are found in PCV7.
In Alaska, before vaccine use, the 5 most common serotypes were 14 (17%), 4 and 7F (9%), 9V (8%), 19F (6%), and 6B (6%). In the prevaccine period among children <2 years of age, 82% of serotypes in Alaska were in PCV7. After introduction of PCV7 (2001–2005), 21% of serotypes were in PCV7 (
| Rank | Alaska | Canada | Greenland, n = 60 | Iceland, n = 269 | Norway, n = 291 | Finland, n = 3,947 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-PCV7, 1999–2000, n = 224 | Post-PCV7, 2001–2005, n = 453 | Pre-PCV7, 1999–2002, n = 158 | Post-PCV7, 2003–2005, n = 82 | ||||||
| 1 | 14 (17%) | 19A (11%) | 1 (34%) | 1 (24%) | 1 (22%) | 7 (20%) | 4, 14 (18%) | 14, 4 (12%) | |
| 2 | 4, 7F (9%) | 4 (8%) | 14 (11%) | 8 (11%) | 12F (15%) | 14 (12%) | 9 (11%) | 9V (8%) | |
| 3 | 9V (8%) | 12F (8%) | 4 (9%) | 3 (7%) | 4 (12%) | 23 (12%) | 6 (9%) | 3, 23F, 7F (7%) | |
| 4 | 19F (6%) | 3, 7F, 8 (7%) | 8 (8%) | 10A, 18C, 22F (6%) | 22F (8%) | 19 (10%) | 23 (8%) | 6B (6%) | |
| 5 | 6B (6%) | 14 (6%) | 6B, 9V (6%) | 6B (5%) | 3 (7%) | 9 (10%) | 7 (7%) | 19A, 19F (4%) | |
| Proportion of serotyped isolates covered by PCV7 and PCV13 vaccines (<2 y of age) | |||||||||
| PCV7 | 82% (51/62) | 21% (16/77) | 76% (25/33) | 21% (3/14) | 50% (3/6) | 51% (23/45) | 37% (10/27) | NA | |
| PCV13 | 92% (57/62) | 57% (44/77) | 94% (31/33) | 43% (6/14) | 83% (5/6) | 60% (27/45) | 56% (15/27) | NA | |
*ICS, International Circumpolar Surveillance; PCV7, 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (serotypes 4, 6B, 9V, 14, 18C, 19F, and 23F); PCV13, 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (7 PCV7sero types plus 1, 3, 5, 6A, 7F, and 19A); NA, not available.
In northern Canada, the 5 most prevalent serotypes before PCV7 use were 1 (34%), 14 (11%), 4 (9%), 8 (8%), and 6B/9V (6% each). In the prevaccine period, among children <2 years of age, 76% of serotypes in northern Canada were in PCV7. During the vaccine implementation period (2003–2005), 21% of serotypes in northern Canada were in PCV7 (
Alaska had the highest proportion of isolates nonsusceptible to antimicrobial drugs among ICS regions reporting these data. With use of PCV7, the proportion of isolates nonsusceptible to penicillin among children <2 years of age decreased from 40% to 29% and from 6% to 0% (prevaccine to postvaccine period) in Alaska and northern Canada, respectively (
| Antimicrobial drug | Age group, y | Alaska | Northern Canada | Iceland, % (n/N) | Northern Sweden, % (n/N) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-PCV7, % (n/N) | Post-PCV7, % (n/N) | Pre-PCV7, % (n/N) | Post-PCV7, % (n/N) | |||||
| Cotrimoxazole | <2 | 58 (36/62) | 34 (26/77) | 9 (3/33) | 17 (2/12) | 35 (13/37) | 100 (1/1) | |
| All ages | 31 (70/224) | 21 (96/453) | 9 (14/158) | 9 (7/78) | 18 (43/234) | 12 (3/25) | ||
| Erythromycin | <2 | 42 (26/62) | 13 (10/77) | 0 (0/33) | 8 (1/13) | 26 (10/38) | 0 (0/2) | |
| All ages | 21 (47/223) | 8 (37/452) | 1 (1/157) | 5 (4/79) | 9 (21/235) | 6 (3/53) | ||
| Ceftriaxone† | <2 | 23 (14/62) | 5 (4/77) | 6 (2/33) | 0 (0/12) | 0 (0/10) | NA | |
| All ages | 11 (25/224) | 1 (6/453) | 4 (7/159) | 0 (0/80) | 0 (0/39) | NA | ||
| Penicillin‡ | <2 | 40 (25/62) | 29 (22/77) | 6 (2/33) | 0 (0/13) | 13 (5/38) | 0 (0/1) | |
| All ages | 22 (50/224) | 15 (68/453) | 5 (8/159) | 4 (3/81) | 8 (20/236) | 2 (1/52) | ||
*ICS, International Circumpolar Surveillance; PCV7, 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine; NA, not available. †Greenland reported nonsusceptibility of 0% (0/38) to ceftriaxone among all ages. ‡Greenland reported nonsusceptibility of 0% (0/41) and Finland reported nonsusceptibility of 6% (236/4,049) to penicillin among all ages. Finland reported nonsusceptibility of 9% (33/367) to penicillin among cases <2 y of age.
Since routine use of PCV7, the proportion of isolates nonsusceptible to cotrimoxazole, erythromycin, ceftriaxone, and penicillin decreased in Alaska. The same trend was not observed in northern Canada, where rates of antimicrobial drug resistance were much lower than in Alaska (
Data on clinical findings were available for Alaska, northern Canada, Greenland, and Norway. Bacteremic pneumonia was the most common clinical finding (range 45%–65%), followed by bacteremia alone (range 16%–24%) and bacteremic meningitis (
| Findings | Alaska, 1999–2005, no. (%) | Northern Canada, 1999–2005, no. (%) | Greenland, 2000–2005, no. (%) | Norway, 2000–2005, no. (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pneumonia with bacteremia | 466 (61) | 162 (65) | 36 (52) | 2,598 (45) |
| Sepsis | 154 (20) | 41 (16) | 14 (20) | 1,404 (25) |
| Bacteremia | 20 (3) | 13 (5) | 0 | 864 (15) |
| Meningitis with bacteremia | 53 (7) | 16 (6) | 14 (20) | 454 (8) |
| Other* | 76 (10) | 19 (8) | 5 (7) | 405 (7) |
| Total | 769 (100) | 251 (100) | 69 (100) | 5,725 (100) |
*Empyema, cellulitis, necrotizing fasciitis, septic arthritis.
Data on risk factors and medical conditions were available for Alaska and northern Canada. Among adults with a diagnosis of IPD in the North American Arctic, 40%–44% had a history of smoking, 37%–39% had a history of alcohol abuse, and 19%–27% had a history of chronic lung disease (
| Factor or condition | Alaska, 1999–2005, no. (%) | Northern Canada, 1999–2005, no. (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Cigarette smoking | 223 (44) | 54 (40) |
| Alcohol abuse† | 201 (39) | 50 (37) |
| Chronic lung disease/asthma | 139 (27) | 26 (19) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 71 (14) | 22 (16) |
| Immunosuppressive therapy | 35 (7) | 5 (4) |
| Injection drug use | 11 (2) | 3 (2) |
| Asplenia | 9 (2) | 4 (3) |
| Total | 509 (100) | 135 (100) |
*Risk factors and medical conditions are not mutually exclusive. Each case may have >1 condition reported. Data were not available for Greenland, Iceland, Norway, northern Sweden, or Finland. †Alcohol abuse was noted in the chart.
Our data show that cases of IPD continue to occur throughout Arctic countries with highest rates among children <2 years of age, adults
Consistent with earlier studies, IPD rates were highest in the prevaccine period among indigenous persons in Alaska and northern Canada and high among children <2 years of age and the elderly (
IPD rates in the prevaccine period among indigenous children ranged from 229/100,000 (northern Canada) to 441/100,000 (in Alaska). These rates that are 4–6 times higher than those found among nonindigenous children in those regions. Indigenous persons in the circumpolar north have been shown to have high rates of IPD (
Our data demonstrate that use of PCV7 in Alaska and northern Canada led to marked decreases in the incidence of IPD and PCV7 serotype–specific disease overall (all age groups combined) among indigenous persons (all age groups combined) and among indigenous children <2 years of age. Use of this vaccine has resulted in a near equalization of rates of PCV7 serotype–specific disease among indigenous children <2 years of age in Alaska and northern Canada. Our data also show decreases in disease among persons >2 years of age who were not targeted to receive vaccine. Although some children >2 years of age may have received vaccine as part of vaccine catch-up programs, older children and adults did not receive the vaccine. Our data show decreases in PCV7 serotype–specific disease among persons 20–64 years of age in northern Canada and among persons
The increased rate of non-PCV7–serotype disease in Alaska after introduction of PCV7, primarily among indigenous persons, is concerning. Increases of such magnitude have not been observed among the general US child population or elsewhere. However, continued vigilance is critical to monitor trends in pneumococcal disease and serotype distribution.
Incidence rates increased among children <2 years of age in 2 of 4 ICS members countries not using PCV7 over the study period (Norway and Finland). Norway began routine use of the vaccine among children in 2006. Continued collection of surveillance data will be critical in the coming years to assess the effect of pneumococcal vaccine, serotype shifts, and changes in antimicrobial drug susceptibility patterns.
Our data show that several serotypes (4, 6, 7, and 14) are common in northern circumpolar countries. Although serotype 1 was the most prevalent serotype in Greenland and northern Canada, it was not common in other circumpolar countries. Among countries that were not using PCV7 during the study period, ≈50% of all IPD cases in children <2 years of age were vaccine preventable (caused by serotypes present in PCV7). Use of 13-valent conjugate vaccine (which includes all PCV7 serotypes plus serotypes 1, 3, 5, 6A, 7F, and 19A) currently being evaluated for use in the United States could theoretically have prevented ≈70% of IPD cases among children <2 years of age.
In the 2 countries currently using PCV7 (Alaska and northern Canada), the proportion of penicillin-nonsusceptible isolates decreased. Published data on antimicrobial drug resistance in Alaska, the United States, and Canada showed an increasing proportion of
To our knowledge, the ICS collaboration and data presented in this report are the first population-based assessment of IPD in the Arctic using similar case definitions and comparable laboratory methods. However, this study has several limitations. We did not collect detailed clinical and demographic information beyond what was available from medical record review and thus could not evaluate an extensive range of risk factors. Data on clinical findings, antimicrobial drug susceptibility, and risk factors are not collected consistently across the entire ICS network, and data on race/ethnicity are collected from only 2 ICS member countries. Because not all ICS member countries joined the network in the same year, the number of years of data available during the study period varied by country. In addition, limited information exists on diagnostic culturing practices of ICS member countries, which may lead to detection bias (milder cases more likely to be detected in some regions). This limitation may contribute to the wide variation in case-fatality rates across the ICS network. Finally, these data do not represent a complete picture of pneumococcal invasive disease in the far north because the Russian Federation does not participate in ICS, and data from only 1 region in northern Sweden are included.
The ICS project provides a broad view of IPD and the utility and status of prevention efforts in the Arctic. Demonstration of the effectiveness of PCV7 in Alaska and Canada and identification of issues relevant for future vaccine development are critical for decision making. Surveillance data on serotype and antimicrobial drug susceptibility distribution in Arctic countries provide necessary information for assessing the potential effect of current and future pneumococcal vaccines. Continuing evaluation of IPD in the ICS network will provide data necessary to maximize IPD prevention efforts throughout the region.
The International Circumpolar Surveillance System for Invasive Pneumococcal Disease Working Group: Jean-François Proulx (Department of Public Health, Nunavik Regional Board of Health and Social Services, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada); Robert Carlin (Department of Public Health, Cree Board of Health and Social Services of James Bay, Montreal, Quebec, Canada); Andre Corriveau, Cheryl Case (Northwest Territory Department of Health and Social Services, Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada); Bryce Larke, Colleen Hemsley (Yukon Health and Social Services, Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada); Isaac Sobel, Carolina Palacios (Nunavut Department of Health, Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada); Gregory Tyrell, Marguerite Lovgren (National Centre for Streptococcus, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada); Alisa Reasonover, Michael G. Bruce, Tammy Zulz, Dana Bruden, Thomas W. Hennessy, Alan J. Parkinson (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Anchorage, Alaska, USA); Shelley L. Deeks (National Centre for Immunisation, Research and Surveillance, Westmead, New South Wales, Australia); Christine Navarro (Public Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada); Louise Jette (Quebec Public Health Laboratory, Ste. Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec, Canada); Karl Kristinsson, Gudrun Sigmundsdottir (Landspitali University Hospital, Reykjavik, Iceland); Knud Brinkløv Jensen (Institution of the Chief Medical Officer, Nuuk, Greenland); Oistein Lovoll (Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway); J. Pekka Nuorti (National Public Health Institute, Helsinki, Finland); Elja Herva (National Public Health Institute, Oulu, Finland); Anders Sjostedt (Umea University, Umea, Sweden); Anders Nystedt (Sunderby Hospital, Lulea, Sweden); and Anders Koch (Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark)
We thank the personnel of the Public Health Agency of Canada, Arctic Investigations Program, Landspitali University Hospital, Office of Greenland’s chief medical officer, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, National Public Health Institute of Finland, Sunderby Hospital and Umea University in Sweden, Statens Serum Institute, the Nunavik, Cree Region, and Alaska Departments of Health for contributions to this study.
This work was supported by CDC and the Public Health Agency of Canada.
Dr Bruce is a medical epidemiologist and epidemiology team leader of the Arctic Investigations Program, National Center for Preparedness, Detection and Control of Infectious Diseases, CDC, Anchorage, Alaska. He is currently the chief medical epidemiologist for the International Circumpolar Surveillance Network and chair of the International Circumpolar Surveillance Working Group. His primary research interests include