1.Global Control of Pneumococcal Infections by Pneumococcal Vaccines
Kazunori Oishi ; Kazuyo Tamura ; Yukihiro Akeda
Tropical Medicine and Health 2014;():-
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a major worldwide cause of morbidity and mortality. Pneumococcal carriage is considered to be an important source of horizontal spread of this pathogen within the community. Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) is capable of inducing serotype-specific antibodies in sera of infants, and has been suggested to reduce nasopharyngeal carriage of vaccine-type pneumococci in children. PCV7 is generally immunogenic for pediatric patients with invasive pneumococcal disease, with an exception for the infecting serotypes. Based on evidences from the clinical trials of PCV, the health impact of childhood pneumococcal pneumonia appears to be high in developing countries where most of global childhood pneumonia deaths occur. PCV vaccination may prevent hundreds of deaths per 100,000 children vaccinated in developing countries, while PCV vaccination is expected to prevent less than 10 deaths per 100, 000 children vaccinated in the developed countries. Therefore, the WHO has proposed a strategy to reduce the incidence of severe pneumonia by 75% in child less than 5 years of age compared to 2010 levels by 2025.
2.Global Control of Pneumococcal Infections by Pneumococcal Vaccines
Kazunori Oishi ; Kazuyo Tamura ; Yukihiro Akeda
Tropical Medicine and Health 2014;42(2SUPPLEMENT):S83-S86
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a major worldwide cause of morbidity and mortality. Pneumococcal carriage is considered to be an important source of horizontal spread of this pathogen within the community. Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) is capable of inducing serotype-specific antibodies in sera of infants, and has been suggested to reduce nasopharyngeal carriage of vaccine-type pneumococci in children. PCV is generally immunogenic for pediatric patients with invasive pneumococcal disease, with an exception for the infecting serotypes. Based on evidences from the clinical trials of PCV, the health impact of childhood pneumococcal pneumonia appears to be high in developing countries where most of global childhood pneumonia deaths occur. PCV vaccination may prevent hundreds of deaths per 100,000 children vaccinated in developing countries, while PCV vaccination is expected to prevent less than 10 deaths per 100,000 children vaccinated in the developed countries. Therefore, the WHO has proposed a strategy to reduce the incidence of severe pneumonia by 75% in child less than 5 years of age compared to 2010 levels by 2025.
3.Responding to the syphilis outbreak in Japan: piloting a questionnaire to evaluate potential risk factors for incident syphilis infection among men who have sex with men in Tokyo, Japan, 2015
Masahiro Ishikane ; Yuzo Arima ; Ichiro Itoda ; Takuri Takahashi ; Takuya Yamagishi ; Tamano Matsui ; Tomimasa Sunagawa ; Kazunori Oishi ; Makoto Ohnishi
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2016;7(3):36-39
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4.A large outbreak of enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli O157, caused by low-salt pickled Napa cabbage in nursing homes, Japan, 2012
Tabuchi Ayako ; Wakui Taku ; Yahata Yuichiro ; Yano Koichi ; Azuma Kotaro ; Yamagishi Takuya ; Nakashima Kazutoshi ; Sunagawa Tomimasa ; Matsui Tamano ; Oishi Kazunori
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2015;6(2):7-11
Objective:In August 2012, an outbreak of enterohaemorrhagic
5.Characteristics of the antibiotic resistance gene of S.pneumoniae isolated from nasopharyngeal swab of the pneumonia patients in Ha Noi
Anh Duc Nguyen ; Huong Le Thanh Phan ; Anh Hien Nguyen ; Khanh Cong Nguyen ; Thi Thi Ngo ; Phuong Mai Doan ; Tsuyoshi Nagatake ; Hiroshi Watanabe ; Kazunori Oishi
Journal of Preventive Medicine 2007;17(4):51-56
Background: Acute lower respiratory tract infection, mainly pneumonia, were the main reasons cause death for children under 5 years old. Objectives: Determine the isolated rate of bacteria inpatients under 5 years old with acute lower respiratory tract infection in Ha Noi and antibiotic resistance of pneumococcal isolated form patients. Subjects and method: Patients under 5 years old with acute lower respiratory tract infection in National hospital of pediatrics and Bach Mai hospital from 01/2002. Using quantitative culturedand PCR method. Results: Out of total 164 patients with lower respiratory tract infection, there were 91 diagnosed pneumonia by chest X-ray, 73 cases of acute bronchitis. 73,6% of the pneumococcal isolated were penicillin resistance (gPRSP) with different genes such as pbp 1a+2x+ab. Most of the S.pneumoniae strains were serotype 19F or 23F. There were no statistic differences by comparison charactersistics of weight, vessel, subclinical symptoms such as: dissolved oxygen level (S\xac\xacp\xac\xac\xac\xacO\xac2\xac), the amount of leucocyte in blood. However, temperature of pneumonia patients was higher than bronchitis patients, breathing of pneumonia patients was also faster than bronchitis patients. Isolated bacteria with amount \ufffd?106 cfu/ml was H.influenzae, S.pneumoniae and Moraxell catarrhalis in pneumonia group, bronchitis group was 28,8% and control group was 17,1%. Conclusion: Penicillin, erythoromycin and co-trimoxazole resistance rate of S.pneumoniaein patients with acute lower respiratory tract infection was high. Quantitative cultured method has prognostic value in diagnosis pneumonia.
Genes
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MDR/ drug effects
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immunology
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Streptococcus pneumoniae/ growth &
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development
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Anti-Bacterial Agents
6.Meningococcal disease outbreak related to the World Scout Jamboree in Japan, 2015
Mizue Kanai ; Hajime Kamiya ; Alison Smith-Palmer ; Hideyuki Takahashi ; Yushi Hachisu ; Munehisa Fukusumi ; Takehito Saitoh ; Makoto Ohnishi ; Tomimasa Sunagawa ; Tamano Matsui ; Kazunori Oishi
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2017;8(2):25-30
Problem: Six invasive meningococcal disease cases occurred among Scottish and Swedish nationals associated with the World Scout Jamboree (WSJ), an international mass gathering, held in Japan. The index case developed symptoms while returning home. The strains from all six cases were identical and seldom seen in Japan.
Context: Over 33 000 participants from 155 countries attended WSJ. At the Jamboree site, participants of the North of Scotland’s and Sweden’s units camped within the same subcamp and kept the same schedule of events. No information was available about the Swedish and Scottish cases’ close personal contact history.
Action: Health Protection Scotland investigated Scottish cases, conducted active case finding, provided chemoprophylaxis, vaccinated close contacts and advised Scottish WSJ participants and contacts to seek medical care if they developed symptoms. The Public Health Agency of Sweden recommended chemoprophylaxis to all participants in Sweden. In Japan, the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW) requested the Scout Association of Japan advise all participants to seek medical attention if they developed symptoms. MHLW shared information about the event with local authorities, medical associations, and the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology.
Outcome: No additional case related to WSJ has been reported. This outbreak highlighted the risk for international spread of invasive meningococcal disease at international mass gatherings.
Discussion: Assessing risk, educating participants, enhancing surveillance and sharing timely information among related countries are significant for prevention and response against invasive meningococcal disease outbreaks at mass gatherings.
7.Ongoing local transmission of dengue in Japan, August to September 2014
Arima Yuzo ; Matsui Tamano ; Shimada Tomoe ; Ishikane Masahiro ; Kawabata Kunio ; Sunagawa Tomimasa ; Kinoshita Hitomi ; Takasaki Tomohiko ; Tsuda Yoshio ; Sawabe Kyoko ; Oishi Kazunori
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2014;5(4):27-29
In late August 2014, three autochthonous dengue cases were reported in Japan. Since then, as of 17 September 2014, a total of 131 autochthonous cases have been confirmed. While cases were reported from throughout Japan, the majority were linked to visiting a large park or its vicinity in Tokyo, and the serotype detected has been serotype 1. We report preliminary findings, along with the public health response activities, of the first documented autochthonous dengue outbreak in Japan in nearly 70 years.Dengue is an acute, mosquito-borne febrile illness caused by a flavivirus found widely in the Asia-Pacific region, particularly in South-East Asia. While the most competent mosquito species for dengue virus transmission is believed to be
8.Trends in the Number and Multiplicity of Blood Culture Submissions in Hospitals in the Minami-Ibaraki Area of Japan
Hanako Osuka ; Shigemi Hitomi ; Tsuyoshi Oishi ; Kazunori Miyamoto ; Tsukasa Kondo ; Teruo Urata ; Eiichi Yabata ; Haruyuki Takei ; Yasunori Funayama ; Miki Goto ; Hiroshi Koganemaru
General Medicine 2014;15(1):29-33
Background: Blood culture is an essential examination for diagnosis of causative microorganisms and determination of optimal antimicrobials in serious cases of infectious diseases. We examined temporal trends in the number and multiplicities of blood culture submission, two pre-analytic parameters indicating quality of the examination, in the Minami Ibaraki Area.
Methods: We reviewed all computerized and available paper-based laboratory records of microbiological examination in five hospitals in the area between 2002 and 2011.
Results: Blood culture submissions, estimated to be 2.4–7.3 (median: 5.1) sets per hospital bed, 8.6–23 (17) per 1,000 inpatient-days, and 0.13–0.41 (0.25) per newly admission in 2011, almost constantly increased during the study period in all hospitals. Proportions of blood specimens to all materials for microbiological cultures also increased up to 15–30% (20%) in 2011. In contrast, it was not until the latter half of the study period that solitary submission, accounting for 26–56% (35%) in 2011, decreased. Positive blood cultures were between 11 and 28% through the study period. Coagulase-negative staphylococci accounted for approximately one fourth of recovered organisms in 2006 and 2011.
Conclusion: Frequency and multiplicity of blood culture submission markedly increased in hospitals in the Minami-Ibaraki Area of Japan.
9.An approach to building Field Epidemiology Training Programme (FETP) trainees’ capacities as educators
Matthew M Griffith ; Ariuntuya Ochirpurev ; Takuya Yamagishi ; Shingo Nishiki ; Baigalmaa Jantsansengee ; Tamano Matsui ; Kazunori Oishi
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2018;9(3):1-3
Field Epidemiology Training Programmes (FETPs), which are modelled after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Epidemic Intelligence Service programme, began in 1980 and have produced graduates in more than 70 countries, including 12 in the Western Pacific Region.1,2 These programmes aim to “build sustainable capacity for detecting and responding to public health threats” and “develop expertise so that disease outbreaks can be detected locally and prevented from spreading”.3 FETPs thus include training in applied epidemiology and public health services. FETP trainees and graduates, however, often have additional responsibilities: mentoring newer trainees, supervising in the field, leading short training courses, facilitating meetings, etc. Programmes therefore must provide trainees with the knowledge and skills to fulfil these responsibilities.
10.Epidemiology of vaccine-preventable diseases in Japan: considerations for pre-travel advice for the 2019 Rugby World Cup and 2020 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games
Matthew M Griffith ; Munehisa Fukusumi ; Yusuke Kobayashi ; Yusuke Matsui ; Shingo Nishiki ; Reiko Shimbashi ; Saeko Morino ; Tomimasa Sunagawa ; Keiko Tanaka-Taya ; Tamano Matsui ; Kazunori Oishi
Western Pacific Surveillance and Response 2018;9(2):26-33
Introduction:
In 2019 and 2020, Japan will host two international sporting events estimated to draw a combined 22 million visitors. Mass gatherings like these ones increase the risk of spread of infectious disease outbreaks and international transmission. Pre-travel advice reduces that risk.
Methods:
To assist ministries of health and related organizations in developing pre-travel advice, we summarized national surveillance data in Japan (2000–2016, to the extent available) for rubella, invasive pneumococcal disease, measles, non-A and non-E viral hepatitis, hepatitis A, invasive Haemophilus influenzae disease, tetanus, typhoid fever, invasive meningococcal disease, Japanese encephalitis, influenza, varicella, mumps and pertussis by calculating descriptive statistics of reported cases and reviewing trends. (See Annex A for details of reviewed diseases.)
Results:
Our findings showed notable incidences of rubella (1.78 per 100 000 person-years), influenza (243.5 cases per sentinel site), and mumps (40.1 per sentinel site); seasonal increases for influenza (November–May) and Japanese encephalitis (August–November); and a geographical concentration of Japanese encephalitis in western Japan. Measles cases decreased from 11 013 in 2008 to 35 in 2015, but outbreaks (n = 165 cases) associated with importation occurred in 2016. Though invasive meningococcal disease incidence was only 0.03 per 100 000, international transmission occurred at a mass gathering in Japan in 2015.
Discussion
Ministries of health and related organizations should use these findings to develop targeted pre-travel advice for travellers to the 2019 Rugby World Cup and the 2020 Summer Olympic and Paralympic Games, especially for mumps, measles, rubella, influenza, and meningitis. Travellers with increased exposure risk should also be advised about hepatitis A and Japanese encephalitis.