Oral Presentation 16th Lorne Infection and Immunity 2026

Genomic surveillance to inform anti-Klebsiella pneumoniae vaccines (132084)

Kelly L Wyres 1 2 3
  1. Department of Infectious Diseases, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
  2. Centre to Impact AMR, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia
  3. Department of Infection Biology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom

Klebsiella pneumoniae is a World Health Organization priority antimicrobial resistant pathogen highlighted for urgent development of novel control strategies such as vaccines. Two major vaccine use cases have been proposed; i) prevention of opportunistic healthcare-associated infections in vulnerable groups such as the elderly and immunocompromised and; ii) a maternal vaccine to protect new born babies in low resource settings where K. pneumoniae is the dominant Gram-negative cause of neonatal sepsis.

Following the global success of glycoconjugate vaccines targeting Haemophilus influenzae B and Streptococcus pneumoniae among others, there has been a swell of interest in anti-K. pneumoniae vaccines targeting the polysaccharide capsule and/or outer lipopolysaccharide (O antigen). However, until recently very little was known about capsule and O antigen diversity and epidemiology, because serological typing approaches were not broadly accessible and/or failed to accurately distinguish the full diversity of K. pneumoniae polysaccharides. This knowledge gap poses a major barrier for vaccine design because there was no way to determine which of the many diverse polysaccharides should be included to achieve high population coverage. Fortunately, genome-based typing approaches and sero-epidemiology analyses can go a long way to fill this information void.

In this presentation I will discuss progress of the genome-based capsule and O antigen typing tool, Kaptive, and its application to reveal key insights into K. pneumoniae sero-epidemiology; from Kaptive’s initial inception in 2015, to recent work informing the design of a novel maternal anti-K. pneumoniae vaccine, and the key challenges that remain.