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Featured researches published by Ebenezer Foster-Nyarko.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Comparison of the Prevalence of Common Bacterial Pathogens in the Oropharynx and Nasopharynx of Gambian Infants

Aderonke Odutola; Martin Antonio; Olumuyiwa Owolabi; Abdoulie Bojang; Ebenezer Foster-Nyarko; Simon Donkor; Ifedayo Adetifa; Sylvia Taylor; Christian Bottomley; Brian Greenwood; Martin Okechukwu Ota

Background CRM- based pneumococcal conjugate vaccines generally have little impact on the overall prevalence of pneumococcal carriage because of serotype replacement. In contrast, protein vaccines could substantially reduce the overall prevalence of pneumococcal carriage with potential microbiological and clinical consequences. Therefore, trials of pneumococcal protein vaccines need to evaluate their impact on carriage of other potentially pathogenic bacteria in addition to the pneumococcus. Methods As a prelude to a trial of an investigational pneumococcal vaccine containing pneumococcal polysaccharide conjugates and pneumococcal proteins, the prevalence of carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella species and Staphylococcus aureus in the nasopharynx of 1030 Gambian infants (median age 35 weeks) was determined. An oropharyngeal swab was obtained at the same time from the first 371 infants enrolled. Standard microbiological techniques were used to evaluate the bacterial flora of the pharynx and to compare that found in the oropharynx and in the nasopharynx. Results The overall pneumococcal carriage rate was high. Isolation rates of S. pneumoniae and Moraxella species were significantly higher using nasopharyngeal rather than oropharyngeal swabs (76.1% [95% CI 73.4%,78.7%] vs. 21.3% [95% CI 17.2%,25.8%] and 48.9% [95% CI 45.8%, 52.0%] vs. 20.5% % [95% CI 16.5%,25.0%] respectively). In contrast, S. aureus and H. influenzae were isolated more frequently from oropharyngeal than from nasopharyngeal swabs (65.0% [95% CI 59.9%, 69.8%] vs. 33.6% [95% CI 30.7%, 36.5%] and 31.8% [95% CI 16.5%, 25.0%] vs. 22.4% [95% CI 19.9%, 25.1%] respectively). No group A β haemolytic streptococci were isolated. Conclusion Collection of an oropharyngeal swab in addition to a nasopharyngeal swab will provide little additional information on the impact of a novel pneumococcal vaccine on pneumococcal carriage but it might provide additional, valuable information on the impact of the vaccine on the overall microbiota of the pharynx.


Vaccine | 2015

Effect on nasopharyngeal pneumococcal carriage of replacing PCV7 with PCV13 in the Expanded Programme of Immunization in The Gambia

Anna Roca; Abdoulie Bojang; Christian Bottomley; Rebecca A. Gladstone; Jane U. Adetifa; Uzochukwu Egere; Sarah E. Burr; Martin Antonio; Stephen D. Bentley; Beate Kampmann; Claire Oluwalana; Olubukola T. Idoko; Isatou Cox; Brenda Kwambana-Adams; Sheikh Jarju; Ebenezer Foster-Nyarko; Brian Greenwood

Introduction In 2011, two years after the introduction of 7-valent Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7), the Gambian immunization programme replaced PVC7 with PCV13 (13-valent). Our objective was to assess the additional impact of PCV13 on prevalence of pneumococcal nasopharyngeal carriage. Methods We recruited healthy Gambian infants who had received three PCV doses. Nasopharyngeal swabs were collected from infants and their mothers during two cross-sectional surveys (CSS) conducted in infants vaccinated with PCV7 (CSS1) and vaccinated with PCV13 (CSS2). Pneumococci were isolated and serotyped following standardized methods. Whole genome sequencing was performed on non-typable pneumococcus isolated in CSS1 and CSS2. Results 339 and 350 infants and their mothers were recruited in CSS1 and CSS2, respectively. Overall prevalence of pneumococcal carriage was 85.4% in infants. Among infants, prevalence of vaccine type (VT) carriage was lower in CSS2 [9.4% versus 4.9% (p = 0.025) for PCV7-VT; 33.3% versus 18.3% (p < 0.001) for PCV13-VT and 23.9% versus 13.7% (p = 0.001) for the 6 additional serotypes included in PCV13]. At CSS2, there was a decrease of serotypes 6A (from 15.3% to 5.7%, p < 0.001) and 19F (from 5.6% to 1.7%, p = 0.007), and an increase of non-typable pneumococci (0.3–6.0%, p < 0.001), most of which (82.4%) were from typable serotype backgrounds that had lost the ability to express a capsule. Prevalence of overall and VT carriage in mothers was similar in CSS1 and CSS2. Conclusions Replacing PCV7 for PCV13 rapidly decreased prevalence of VT carriage among vaccinated Gambian infants. An indirect effect in mothers was not observed yet. Vaccine-driven selection pressure may have been responsible for the increase of non-typable isolates.


Vaccine | 2017

Efficacy of a novel, protein-based pneumococcal vaccine against nasopharyngeal carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae in infants: A phase 2, randomized, controlled, observer-blind study

Aderonke Odutola; Martin O. C. Ota; Martin Antonio; Ezra O. Ogundare; Yauba Saidu; Ebenezer Foster-Nyarko; Patrick K. Owiafe; Fatima Ceesay; Archibald Worwui; Olubukola T. Idoko; Olumuyiwa Owolabi; Abdoulie Bojang; Sheikh Jarju; Isatou Drammeh; Beate Kampmann; Brian Greenwood; Mark Alderson; Magali Traskine; Nathalie Devos; Sonia Schoonbroodt; Kristien Swinnen; Vincent Verlant; Kurt Dobbelaere; Dorota Borys

BACKGROUND Conserved pneumococcal proteins are potential candidates for inclusion in vaccines against pneumococcal diseases. In the first part of a two-part study, an investigational vaccine (PHiD-CV/dPly/PhtD-30) containing 10 pneumococcal serotype-specific polysaccharide conjugates (10VT) combined with pneumolysin toxoid and pneumococcal histidine triad protein D (30μg each) was well tolerated by Gambian children. Part two, presented here, assessed the efficacy of two PHiD-CV/dPly/PhtD formulations against pneumococcal nasopharyngeal carriage (NPC) prevalence in infants. METHODS In this phase 2, randomized, controlled, observer-blind trial, healthy infants aged 8-10weeks, recruited from a peri-urban health center, were randomized (1:1:1:1:1:1) into six groups. Four groups received PHiD-CV/dPly/PhtD (10 or 30μg of each protein), PHiD-CV, or 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine at ages 2-3-4months (3+0 infant schedule) and two groups PHiD-CV/dPly/PhtD-30 or PHiD-CV at 2-4-9months (2+1 infant schedule). The primary objective was impact on non-10VT NPC at ages 5-9-12months. Secondary objectives included confirmatory analysis of protein dose superiority and safety/reactogenicity. Impact on pneumococcal NPC acquisition, bacterial load, and ply and phtD gene sequencing were explored. RESULTS 1200 infants were enrolled between June 2011 and May 2012. Prevalences of pneumococcal (60-67%) and non-10VT (55-61%) NPC were high at baseline. Across all post-vaccination time points, efficacy of PHiD-CV/dPly/PhtD-10 and PHiD-CV/dPly/PhtD-30 against non-10VT NPC (3+0 schedule) was 1.1% (95% CI -21.5, 19.5) and 2.1% (-20.3, 20.3), respectively; efficacy of PHiD-CV/dPly/PhtD-30 (2+1 schedule) was 0.5% (-22.1, 18.9) versus PHiD-CV. No differences were observed in pneumococcal NPC acquisition, clearance, or bacterial load. Both protein-based vaccines elicited immune responses to pneumococcal proteins. CONCLUSIONS In this high carriage prevalence setting, inclusion of pneumococcal proteins in the PHiD-CV/dPly/PhtD investigational vaccine had no impact on pneumococcal NPC in infants, regardless of protein dose or schedule. Future evaluations will assess its impact against pneumococcal disease endpoints. FUNDING PATH, GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals SA. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT01262872.


Emerging Themes in Epidemiology | 2015

The impact of childhood vaccines on bacterial carriage in the nasopharynx: a longitudinal study

Christian Bottomley; Abdoulie Bojang; Peter G. Smith; Ousainou Darboe; Martin Antonio; Ebenezer Foster-Nyarko; Beate Kampmann; Brian Greenwood; Umberto D’Alessandro; Anna Roca

BackgroundThere is increasing evidence that childhood vaccines have effects that extend beyond their target disease. The objective of this study was to assess the effects of routine childhood vaccines on bacterial carriage in the nasopharynx.MethodsA cohort of children from rural Gambia was recruited at birth and followed up for one year. Nasopharyngeal swabs were taken immediately after birth, every two weeks for the first six months and then every other month. The presence of bacteria in the nasopharynx (Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus) was compared before and after the administration of DTP-Hib-HepB and measles-yellow fever vaccines.ResultsA total of 1,779 nasopharyngeal swabs were collected from 136 children for whom vaccination data were available. The prevalence of bacterial carriage was high: 82.2% S. pneumoniae, 30.6%, S.aureus, 27.8% H. influenzae. Carriage of H. influenzae (OR = 0.36; 95% CI: 0.13, 0.99) and S. pneumoniae (OR = 0.25; 95% CI: 0.07, 0.90) were significantly reduced after measles-yellow fever vaccination; while DTP-Hib-HepB had no effect on bacterial carriage.ConclusionsNasopharyngeal bacterial carriage is unaffected by DTP-Hib-HepB vaccination and reduced after measles-yellow fever vaccination.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2015

Salmonella Infections in The Gambia, 2005–2015

Brenda Kwambana-Adams; Saffiatou Darboe; Helen Nabwera; Ebenezer Foster-Nyarko; Usman N. Ikumapayi; Ousman Secka; Modupeh Betts; Richard S. Bradbury; Rita Wegmüller; Bolarinde Joseph Lawal; Debasish Saha; M. Jahangir Hossain; Andrew M. Prentice; Beate Kampmann; Suzanne T. Anderson; Umberto D'Alessandro; Martin Antonio

BACKGROUND There are large data gaps in the epidemiology of diseases caused by Salmonella enterica in West Africa. Regional surveillance of Salmonella infections is necessary, especially with the emergence and spread of multidrug-resistant clones. METHODS Data on Salmonella isolated from various clinical specimens from patients from across The Gambia were collected and analyzed retrospectively from 2005 to April 2015. Antibiotic sensitivity testing of Salmonella isolates was performed by disk diffusion method. Serotyping and serogrouping of Salmonella isolates was performed using standard microbiology techniques. RESULTS Two hundred three Salmonella isolates were isolated from 190 patients: 52% (106/203) from blood and 39% (79/203) from stool specimens. Salmonella was also isolated from urine, aspirates, cerebrospinal fluid, wounds, and abscesses. The prevalence of Salmonella in blood cultures was 0.8% (106/13,905). Of the serotyped salmonellae, 14% (21/152) were Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi, whereas 86% (131/152) were serovars other than Typhi (nontyphoidal Salmonella). Of the 102 typed NTS isolates, 40% (41) were Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, 10% (10) were Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis, and 3% (3) were Salmonella enterica serovar Arizonae. Overall, 70% (142/203) of the salmonellae were pansusceptible. Multidrug resistance was found in 4% (9/203) of the isolates, 3 of which were Salmonella Enteritidis. CONCLUSIONS Salmonellae are associated with a wide spectrum of invasive and noninvasive infections across all ages in The Gambia. There is evidence of multidrug resistance in salmonellae that warrants vigilant monitoring and surveillance.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2016

Alternative Molecular Methods for Improved Detection of Meningococcal Carriage and Measurement of Bacterial Density

Olivier Manigart; Jacinta Okeakpu; Aderonke Odutola; Sheikh Jarju; Ebenezer Foster-Nyarko; Kanny Diallo; Anna Roca; Beate Kampmann; Umberto D'Alessandro; Samba O. Sow; Martin Antonio; Martin J.C. Maiden; Ray Borrow; James M. Stuart; Caroline L. Trotter; Brian Greenwood

ABSTRACT Conventional methods for detecting pharyngeal carriage of Neisseria meningitidis are complex. There is a need for simpler methods with improved performance. We have investigated two alternative approaches. Three pharyngeal swabs were collected from 999 pupils aged 10 to 18 years in The Gambia. Carriage of N. meningitidis was investigated by using three different methods: (i) plating on Thayer-Martin selective medium and testing by conventional microbiological methods followed by PCR testing; (ii) seeding in Todd-Hewitt broth (THB) and, after culture overnight, testing by PCR; and (iii) compression of the swab on filter paper and, after DNA concentration, testing by PCR. PCR after culture in THB was more than twice as sensitive as conventional methods in detecting N. meningitidis (13.2% versus 5.7%; P < 0.0001). PCR after DNA extraction from filter paper had a sensitivity similar to that of conventional methods (4.9% versus 5.7%; P = 0.33). Capsular genogroups detected by broth culture were genogroups W (21 isolates), B (12 isolates), Y (8 isolates), E (3 isolates), and X (2 isolates), and 68 meningococci had the capsule-null intergenic region. The distributions of genogroups and of capsule-null organisms were similar with each of the three methods. The carriage density in samples extracted from filter paper ranged from 1 to 25,000 DNA copies. PCR of broth cultures grown overnight doubled the yield of N. meningitidis carriage isolates compared with conventional methods. This approach could improve the efficiency of carriage studies. Collection on filter paper followed by quantitative PCR could be useful for density measurement and for carriage studies in areas with limited resources.


Vaccine | 2017

Association between functional antibody against Group B Streptococcus and maternal and infant colonization in a Gambian cohort.

Kirsty Le Doare; Amadou Faal; Mustapha Jaiteh; Francess Sarfo; Stephen Taylor; Fiona Warburton; Holly Humphries; Jessica Birt; Sheikh Jarju; Saffiatou Darboe; Edward Clarke; Martin Antonio; Ebenezer Foster-Nyarko; Paul T. Heath; Andrew Gorringe; Beate Kampmann

Highlights • As maternally-derived anti-GBS antibody increases infant colonization risk decreases.• There is a serotype-specific threshold above which an infant is uncolonised with GBS.• Higher anti-GBS antibody is associated with infant clearance of GBS between birth and 3 months.


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2016

An outbreak of pneumococcal meningitis among older children (≥5 years) and adults after the implementation of an infant vaccination programme with the 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in Ghana.

Brenda Kwambana-Adams; Franklin Asiedu-Bekoe; Badu Sarkodie; Osei Kuffour Afreh; George Khumalo Kuma; Godfred Owusu-Okyere; Ebenezer Foster-Nyarko; Sally-Ann Ohene; Charles Okot; Archibald Worwui; Catherine Okoi; Madikay Senghore; Jacob Otu; Chinelo Ebruke; Richard Bannerman; Kwame Amponsa-Achiano; David Opare; Gemma L. Kay; Timothy Letsa; Owen Kaluwa; Ebenezer Appiah-Denkyira; Victor Bampoe; Syed M. A. Zaman; Mark J. Pallen; Umberto D’Alessandro; Jason M. Mwenda; Martin Antonio


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2016

Transmission of Staphylococcus aureus from Humans to Green Monkeys in The Gambia as Revealed by Whole-Genome Sequencing

Madikay Senghore; Sion Bayliss; Brenda Kwambana-Adams; Ebenezer Foster-Nyarko; Jainaba Manneh; Michel M. Dione; Henry Badji; Chinelo Ebruke; Emma L. Doughty; Harry A. Thorpe; Anna J. Jasinska; Christopher A. Schmitt; Jennifer Danzy Cramer; Trudy R. Turner; George M. Weinstock; Nelson B. Freimer; Mark Pallen; Edward J. Feil; Martin Antonio


BMC Microbiology | 2016

Associations between nasopharyngeal carriage of Group B Streptococcus and other respiratory pathogens during early infancy

Ebenezer Foster-Nyarko; Brenda Kwambana; Odutola Aderonke; Fatima Ceesay; Sheikh Jarju; Abdoulie Bojang; Jessica McLellan; James Jafali; Beate Kampmann; Martin O. C. Ota; Ifedayo Adetifa; Martin Antonio

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Sheikh Jarju

Medical Research Council

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Chinelo Ebruke

Medical Research Council

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