Thabo Hamiwe

and 9 more

Introduction: Pseudomonas aeruginosa AUST-03 (ST242) has been reported to cause epidemics in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients from Tasmania and Australia and has been associated with multidrug resistance and increased morbidity and mortality. Here, we report epidemic P. aeruginosa (AUST-03) strains in South African CF patients at a public academic hospital detected during a previous study and characterise the resistomes. Methods: The P. aeruginosa AUST-03 (ST242) strains were analysed with whole genome sequencing using the Illumina NextSeq2000 platform. Raw sequencing reads were processed using the Jekesa pipeline and multi-locus sequence typing and resistome characterisation was performed using public databases. Core single nucleotide polymorphism phylogenies were performed on P. aeruginosa ST242 strains from the study and from public databases. Antibiotic susceptibility testing was performed using the disk diffusion and broth microdilution techniques. Results: A total of 11 P. aeruginosa AUST-03 strains were isolated from two children with CF who had pulmonary exacerbations. The majority of the P. aeruginosa AUST-03 strains (8/11) were multidrug resistant (MDR) or extensively drug resistant; and the multidrug efflux pumps MexAB-OprM, MexCD-OprJ, MexEF-OprN, MexXY-OprM were the most clinically relevant antibiotic resistance determinants and were detected in all of the strains. The P. aeruginosa AUST-03 (ST242) study strains were most closely related to strains from Canada, China, Denmark and Slovenia. Conclusion: Epidemic MDR P. aeruginosa strains are present at South African public CF clinics and need to be considered when implementing patient segregation and infection control strategies to prevent further spread and outbreaks.

Jonny PETER

and 12 more

Abstract ( n=254/250 words)   Background: The Janssen-Ad26.COV2.S vaccine is authorised for use in several countries with more than 30 million doses administered. Mild and severe allergic adverse events following immunisation(AEFI) have been reported. The aim of this report is to detail allergic reactions reported during the Sisonke phase 3B study in South Africa. Methods: A single-dose of the Ad26.COV2.S vaccine was administered to 477234 South African Healthcare Workers between 17 February and 17 May 2021. Monitoring of adverse events used a combination of passive reporting and active case finding. Telephonic contact was attempted for all adverse events reported as “allergy”. Anaphylaxis adjudication was performed using the Brighton Collaboration (BCC) and NIAID case definitions.  Results: A large cohort of South African healthcare workers received the Ad26.COV2.S vaccination. Only 250(0.052%) patients reported any allergic-type reaction(less than 1 in 2000), with four cases of adjudicated anaphylaxis (BCC level 1, n=3)(prevalence of 8.4 per million doses). All anaphylaxis cases had a prior history of drug or vaccine-associated anaphylaxis. Cutaneous allergic reactions were the commonest non-anaphylatic reactions and included: self-limiting, transient/localised rashes requiring no healthcare contact(n=91); or isolated urticaria and/or angioedema[n=70 median  onset 48(IQR 11.5-120) hours post vaccination] that necessitated healthcare contact(81%), antihistamine(63%), and/or systemic/topical corticosteroid(16%). All immediate (including adjudicated anaphylaxis) and the majority of delayed AEFI(65/69) cases resolved completely.   Conclusions: Allergic AEFI are rare following a single-dose of Ad26.COV with complete resolution in  all cases of anaphylaxis. Though rare, isolated, delayed onset urticaria and/or angioedema was the commonest allergic AEFI requiring treatment, with nearly half occurring in participants without known atopic disease.   Keywords: allergic reaction, anaphylaxis, COVID19 adenovirus vaccine; Janssen-Ad26.COV2.S vaccine, urticaria