BackgroundThe serogroup A conjugate meningococcal vaccine, MenAfriVac, was introduced in mass vaccination campaigns in December 2010 in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger. In the coming years, vaccination will be extended to other African countries at risk of epidemics. To document the molecular characteristics of disease-causing meningococcal strains circulating in the meningitis belt of Africa before vaccine introduction, the World Health Organization Collaborating Centers on Meningococci in Europe and United States established a common strain collection of 773 isolates from cases of invasive meningococcal disease collected between 2004 and 2010 from 13 sub-Saharan countries.MethodologyAll isolates were characterized by multilocus sequence typing, and 487 (62%) were also analyzed for genetic variation in the surface antigens PorA and FetA. Antibiotic susceptibility was tested for part of the collection.Principal FindingsOnly 19 sequence types (STs) belonging to 6 clonal complexes were revealed. ST-5 clonal complex dominated with 578 (74.8%) isolates. All ST-5 complex isolates were remarkably homogeneous in their PorA (P1.20,9) and FetA (F3-1) and characterized the serogroup A strains which have been responsible for most epidemics during this time period. Sixty-eight (8.8%) of the 773 isolates belonged to the ST-11 clonal complex which was mainly represented by serogroup W135, while an additional 38 (4.9%) W135 isolates belonged to the ST-175 complex. Forty-eight (6.2%) serogroup X isolates from West Africa belonged to the ST-181 complex, while serogroup X cases in Kenya and Uganda were caused by an unrelated clone, ST-5403. Serogroup X, ST-181, emerged in Burkina Faso before vaccine introduction.ConclusionsIn the seven years preceding introduction of a new serogroup A conjugate vaccine, serogroup A of the ST-5 clonal complex was identified as the predominant disease-causing strain.
In Africa the highest HIV infection rate has been reported among female commercial sex workers (CSWs) who are at increasing risk of acquiring and transmitting HIV infection. In October 1995, 176 CSWs were studied in Bamako, the capital city of Mali. The ages of the CSWs ranged from 15 to 50 years old (mean, 28.8 years). Only 20.45% of the 176 CSWs were Malian; the majority were from Nigeria (32.9%) and Ghana (31.8%), and the remaining were from other African countries. Forty-one percent were active for less than 1 year as a commercial sex worker, and the length of prostitution for the remaining women ranged from 1 to 15 years (mean, 2.76). A total of 81 (46.02%) of the 176 CSWs were positive for HIV antibodies; 63 (35.8%) were HIV-1 positive, (3.9%) were HIV-2 positive, 11 (6.2%) had antibodies to HIV-1 and HIV-2, and none of them had antibodies to group O viruses. For all HIV antibody-positive samples, PBMCs were separated and genetic subtypes of HIV-1 were determined using the heteroduplex mobility assay (HMA), with ED5-ED12 as outer and ES7-ES8 as inner primers. Among the 66 HIV-1 strains characterized, 53 (80.3%) were subtype A, 2 (3.1%) belonged to subtype C, 1 (1.5%) belonged to subtype D, and 10 (15.1%) were identified as subtype G. Among the 10 subtype G strains, 8 were obtained from women who were very recent CSWs, with an activity of 1 year or less, assuming that there is a high probability that these infections occurred recently. Genetic subtypes of five HIV-2 viruses were determined by sequencing of the env and/or gag genes followed by phylogenetic analysis, and all of them belonged to subtype A. Comparison of HIV-1 and HIV-2 seroprevalence data from our study with previous data from Mali shows a significant rise in HIV-1 prevalence and a significant decrease in HIV-2 prevalence and confirms similar trends observed in neighboring countries. We have found four different genetic subtypes of HIV-1; however, subtype A is predominant and accounts for 80% of the cases and 15% of the HIV-1 infections were subtype G. It is important to continue the surveillance of subtypes on a systematic basis in order to see to what extent the proportions of the different subtypes will change over time.
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