Pneumococcal colonisation is an asymptomatic event in healthy adults using an experimental human colonisation model

Ashleigh Trimble, Victoria Connor, Ryan Robinson, Daniella McLenaghan, Carole A. Hancock, Duolao Wang, Stephen Gordon, Daniela Ferreira, Angela D. Wright, Andrea Collins

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Introduction

Pneumococcal colonisation is regarded as a pre-requisite for developing pneumococcal disease. In children previous studies have reported pneumococcal colonisation to be a symptomatic event and described a relationship between symptom severity/frequency and colonisation density. The evidence for this in adults is lacking in the literature. This study uses the experimental human pneumococcal challenge (EHPC) model to explore whether pneumococcal colonisation is a symptomatic event in healthy adults.

Methods

Healthy participants aged 18–50 were recruited and inoculated intra-nasally with either Streptococcus pneumoniae (serotypes 6B, 23F) or saline as a control. Respiratory viral swabs were obtained prior to inoculation. Nasal and non-nasal symptoms were then assessed using a modified Likert score between 1 (no symptoms) to 7 (cannot function). The rate of symptoms reported between the two groups was compared and a correlation analysis performed.

Results

Data from 54 participants were analysed. 46 were inoculated with S. pneumoniae (29 with serotype 6B, 17 with serotype 23F) and 8 received saline (control). In total, 14 became experimentally colonised (30.4%), all of which were inoculated with serotype 6B. There was no statistically significant difference in nasal (p = 0.45) or non-nasal symptoms (p = 0.28) between the inoculation group and the control group. In those who were colonised there was no direct correlation between colonisation density and symptom severity. In the 22% (12/52) who were co-colonised, with pneumococcus and respiratory viruses, there was no statistical difference in either nasal or non-nasal symptoms (virus positive p = 0.74 and virus negative p = 1.0).

Conclusion

Pneumococcal colonisation using the EHPC model is asymptomatic in healthy adults, regardless of pneumococcal density or viral co-colonisation.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere0229558
Pages (from-to)E0229558
JournalPLoS ONE
Volume15
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Mar 2020
Externally publishedYes

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Pneumococcal colonisation is an asymptomatic event in healthy adults using an experimental human colonisation model'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this