posted on 2025-08-18, 21:44authored byJonathan Stevenson, Philip Bird, Samuel Hale, Stephen Rowlands, Leon Kong, Benjamin Keren, Andrew Anglemyer, Tony WallsTony Walls
<p dir="ltr"><b>Background: </b>In 2017, PCV-13 was replaced by PCV-10 in the New Zealand immunisation schedule. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of this change on the incidence and microbiology of paediatric acute mastoiditis (AM) in NZ.</p><p dir="ltr"><b>Methods: </b>A retrospective observational study was conducted, including patients aged <18 years with an ICD-10 diagnosis of AM documented in the NZ National Minimum Dataset between 2014 and 2022. Clinical and microbiological data were obtained for a sub-group of cases admitted to five tertiary hospitals across NZ. Cases were divided into four periods, 2014–2016 (PCV-13 baseline), 2017–2019 (transition), 2020–2021 (PCV-10 COVID) and 2022 (PCV-10 post-COVID) for analysis. In each period the national incidence of all-cause AM, proportion of AM cases attributable to<i> S.pneumoniae</i> and proportion of <i>S.pneumoniae</i> AM cases presenting with a subperiosteal abscess were compared with the baseline period.</p><p dir="ltr"><b>Summary of results: </b>391 new cases of paediatric AM occurred during the study period. The national incidence of paediatric AM increased from a baseline of 3.62 cases/100,000 person-years in 2014–2016 to 6.22 cases/100,000 person-years in 2022 (RR 1.72, 95 % CI 1.28–2.30). Microbiological data was available for 212 cases. In 2022 48 % of cases were attributed to<i> S.pneumoniae</i>, compared with 27 % in the baseline period (p = 0.03). In 2022 17/20 (85 %) of <i>S.pneumoniae</i> cases presented with a sub-periosteal abscess, compared with 8/18 (44 %) in the baseline period (p < 0.01).</p><p dir="ltr"><b>Conclusion:</b> The national incidence in NZ of all-cause paediatric AM increased in 2022, with a significant increase in the proportion of cases attributable to<i> S.pneumoniae</i>.</p>