Vaccine Strain and Wild-Type Clades of Varicella-Zoster Virus in Central Nervous System and Non-CNS Disease, New York State, 2004-2019.
Patrick BryantTugba YildirimSara B GriesemerKara ShawDylan J EhrbarKirsten St GeorgePublished in: Journal of clinical microbiology (2022)
Since the introduction of the varicella-zoster virus (VZV) vaccine in the United States in 1995, there has been a dramatic decrease in both the number and severity of varicella cases. However, VZV surveillance data and information on the VZV clade distribution in central nervous system (CNS) disease and non-CNS disease in New York State is not available. To investigate this, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from patients with encephalitis or meningitis and non-CSF samples from patients with non-CNS disease manifestations consistent with VZV, collected from 2004 to 2019, were tested with molecular VZV assays. A total of 341 CSF and 1,398 non-CSF samples that tested positive by a VZV-specific real-time PCR assay were further characterized as wild-type or vaccine strain by 3 biallelic real-time PCR assays targeting single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers in open reading frame (ORF) 62. Genotyping was then performed on wild-type strains by conventional PCR and sequencing of 500-bp regions in ORFs 21, 22, and 50. Sequence analysis identified clades 1 to 5 in both sample types with a virtually identical clade distribution between CSF and non-CSF samples. In addition, 19 clade 6 and 13 clade 9 samples were detected in non-CSF samples after implementation of an expanded genotyping scheme, including ORF 29, 38, and 67. These clades were not detected in any CSF samples. Finally, a total of 28 vaccine strains were detected, 25 in the non-CSF samples and 3 in the CSF samples. All three cases of vaccine strain with CNS involvement experienced relatively minor symptoms of aseptic meningitis and fully recovered. These results support the evidence that while the VZV vaccine is capable of causing CNS disease, it is still a rare event and symptoms are typically less severe than those caused by wild-type infection.