As part of a nationwide surveillance in The Netherlands during 1994- 1997, 53 patients with invasive group A streptococcal (GAS) infections were evaluated for medical history, symptoms, and outcome. Patients' isolates were tested for the production of pyrogenic exotoxins A (SPE-A) and B (SPE- B). Acute-phase sera from all patients and convalescent sera from 12 patients were investigated for the presence of antibodies against SPE-A and SPE-B. Twenty-three patients developed toxic shock-like syndrome and 16 died. Absence of antibodies against SPE-A and/or SPE-B was a risk factor for developing invasive streptococcal disease. Toxic shock and mortality were associated with a lack of anti-SPE-A antibodies (P < .025). Anti-SPE-A antibodies were found in convalescent sera from all patients infected by speA-positive isolates. Virtually all invasive speA-positive streptococci expressed SPE-A protein in vitro. Thus antibodies against SPE-A appeared vital for mediating the outcome of invasive GAS disease in this population.
CITATION STYLE
Mascini, E. M., Jansze, M., Schellekens, J. F. P., Musser, J. M., Faber, J. A. J., Verhoef-Verhage, L. A. E., … Van Dijk, H. (2000). Invasive group a streptococcal disease in The Netherlands: Evidence for a protective role of anti-exotoxin A antibodies. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 181(2), 631–638. https://doi.org/10.1086/315222
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