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- Title
An age-stratified serosurvey against purified Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi antigens in the Lao People´s Democratic Republic.
- Authors
Hefele, Lisa; Black, Antony P.; Van Tan, Trinh; Tri Minh, Nguyen; Duc Hoang, Nguyen; Virachith, Siriphone; Muller, Claude P.; Hübschen, Judith M.; Russell, Paula; Bartholdson Scott, Josefin; Ngoc Minh, Chau Nguyen; Thieu Nga, Tran Vu; Baker, Stephen
- Abstract
The epidemiology of typhoid fever in Lao People's Democratic Republic is poorly defined. Estimating the burden of typhoid fever in endemic countries is complex due to the cost and limitations of population-based surveillance; serological approaches may be a more cost-effective alternative. ELISAs were performed on 937 serum samples (317 children and 620 adults) from across Lao PDR to measure IgG antibody titers against Vi polysaccharide and the experimental protein antigens, CdtB and HlyE. We measured the significance of the differences between antibody titers in adults and children and fitted models to assess the relationship between age and antibody titers. The median IgG titres of both anti-HylE and CdtB were significantly higher in children compared to adults (anti-HylE; 351.7 ELISA Units (EU) vs 198.1 EU, respectively; p<0.0001 and anti-CdtB; 52.6 vs 12.9 EU; p<0.0001). Conversely, the median anti-Vi IgG titer was significantly higher in adults than children (11.3 vs 3.0 U/ml; p<0.0001). A non-linear trend line fitted to the anti-CdtB and anti-HlyE IgG data identified a peak in antibody concentration in children <5 years of age. We identified elevated titers of anti-HlyE and anti-CdtB IgG in the serum of children residing in Lao PDR in comparison to adults. These antigens are associated with seroconversion after typhoid fever and may be a superior measure of disease burden than anti-Vi IgG. This approach is scalable and may be developed to assess the burden of typhoid fever in countries where the disease may be endemic, and evidence is required for the introduction of typhoid vaccines. Author summary: Typhoid fever is a serious bloodstream infection caused by the bacterium Salmonella Typhi. Estimating the burden of typhoid fever is complex due to the limitations, cost, and scalability of current diagnostic surveillance methods. The detection of specific antibody responses against the organism may be a more sustainable manner of measuring exposure and disease burden in endemic location. We measured antibody (IgG) in 937 serum samples (317 children and 620 adults) from across the Lao People's Democratic Republic against a polysaccharide (Vi) and two experimental protein antigens, CdtB and HlyE, that may more appropriate markers of disease exposure. We measured the significance of the differences between antibody titers in adults and children and fitted models to assess the relationship between age and antibody titers. The median IgG titres against HylE and CdtB were significantly higher in children than adults. Conversely, the median IgG titres against Vi was significantly higher in adults than children. We identified a significant association between a peak in IgG titres against CdtB and HlyE in children aged under 5 years. These data are indicative of high level of typhoid fever exposure in children under 5 years of age in Lao PDR and we surmise that IgG titres against HylE and CdtB may be a superior measure of typhoid disease burden than IgG titres against Vi. Our approach is scalable and can be further validated to assess the burden of typhoid fever in countries where the disease may be endemic, and evidence is required for the introduction of typhoid vaccines.
- Subjects
LAOS; SALMONELLA enterica serovar Typhi; TYPHOID fever; IMMUNOGLOBULIN G; ANTIGENS; SALMONELLA typhi
- Publication
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2021, Vol 15, Issue 12, p1
- ISSN
1935-2727
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1371/journal.pntd.0010017