4.5 Article

Evidence of increased carriage olf Corynebacterium spp. in healthy individuals with low antibody titres against diphtheria toxoid

Journal

EPIDEMIOLOGY AND INFECTION
Volume 125, Issue 1, Pages 105-112

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0950268899004331

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This study evaluated whether a correlation exists between carriage of corynebacteria and the lack of immunity to diphtheria toroid. Samples of both nasal and pharyngeal secretions were taken from 500 apparently healthy subjects of both sexes and of all ages and inoculated onto Tinsdale's medium. A serum sample was also taken for ELISA test to determine the titre of diphtheria toxin antibodies. None of the subjects carried Corynebacterium diphtheriae. Ninety-three strains of Corynebacterium spp. were isolated from 93 subjects and 86 of these were classified to species or group level by biochemical tests. C. xerosis was the most common (25.8 %) followed by C. pseudodiphthericum (16.1 %), C. jeikeium and C. striatum (both 10.8 %), and C. urealyticum (9.7%). Three other species accounted fbr approximately 20% of strains and seven were unclassified as biochemically atypical corynebacteria. Non-protective antibodies to diphtheria toxin were found in 80 of the 93 subjects and a strong statistical association was demonstrated between carriage of corynebacteria and non-protective levels of anti-toxin antibodies. The remaining 13 subjects had protective levels of antitoxin antibodies. In contrast, only 45 of the 407 non-colonized subjects had non-protective antitoxin titres. The prevalence of carriage increased with age among males as did the percentage of non-protected subjects. The prevalence of female carriers of corynebacteria was significantly lower. Serum samples from 12 subjects with different antibody titres to diphtheria toroid reacted to varying degrees with whole-cell lysates of a number of species of corynebacteria. The results suggest that a causal relationship may exist between nasopharyngeal carriage of corynebacteria and a low antidiphtheria toxin immune response.

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