A 5-year study of the seroepidemiology of Klebsiella pneumoniae: High prevalence of capsular serotype K1 in Taiwan and implication for vaccine efficacy

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Abstract

Seroepidemiology of Klebsiella pneumoniae was determined for 1000 nonrepetitive K. pneumoniae isolates collected by a medical center in Taiwan during 1993-1997. Of these, 630 isolates (63%) were from community-acquired infections; the rest were from hospital-acquired infections. The isolates were serotyped according to capsular antigen by countercurrent immunoelectrophoresis. About 77% were typeable. Serotypes K1 and K2 accounted for 21,7% and 9.3% of the isolates, respectively, followed by K57 (5.1%), K54 (4.2%), K21 (3.3%), and K16 (3%). The frequency of serotype K1 among bacteremic isolates (30.8%) far exceeded that reported by other investigators worldwide. Molecular typing of random K1 isolates by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis revealed several different pulsotypes, suggesting a nonclonal spread. This study indicates that a Klebsiella vaccine developed in Europe is not optimal for use in Taiwan because it does not contain the most predominant serotypes - K1, K54, and K57.

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Fung, C. P., Hu, B. S., Chang, F. Y., Lee, S. C., Kuo, B. I. T., Ho, M., … Liu, C. Y. (2000). A 5-year study of the seroepidemiology of Klebsiella pneumoniae: High prevalence of capsular serotype K1 in Taiwan and implication for vaccine efficacy. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 181(6), 2075–2079. https://doi.org/10.1086/315488

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