Meningitis outbreaks and vaccination strategy.

Varaine F Caugant DA Riou JY Kondé MK Soga G Nshimirimana D Muhirwa G Ott D Høiby EA Fermon F Moren A
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene ; 91(1); 3-7. doi: . Epub 1997 04 17

Abstract

Three outbreaks of meningitis caused by Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A (subgroup III) are described: Niger (1991), Burundi (1992), and Guinea (1993). These outbreaks showed unusual characteristics: a shorter inter-epidemic interval (Niger), unusual geographical location outside the meningitis belt (Burundi and Guinea), and high age-specific attack rates in all age groups (Burundi and Guinea). Mass immunization campaigns mobilized considerable human and financial means (US $322,000 and 3000 person-days of work for health personnel to immunize 629,000 people in Guinea). The vaccination coverage was over 80% in densely populated areas (Burundi and urban Guinea), but below 50% in less populated areas (24/27 and 26/30 sub-districts in Niger and Guinea, respectively). The preventive fraction (proportion of cases prevented by vaccination) was substantial in Guinea (35% for a vaccine efficacy of 85%) and was higher where the campaign was initiated earlier. An 'alert' threshold indicating the onset of an epidemic of 15/100,000 cases in one week showed good sensitivity (94%), specificity (98%) and positive predictive value (89%) in Burundi, permitting quick decision making outside the meningitis belt. These 3 meningococcal meningitis outbreaks show the need for epidemic emergency preparedness and for vigilance on the whole African continent.