ESTIMATING THE BURDEN OF PERTUSSIS IN OLDER CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS

Cagney M1, MacIntyre CR1, McIntyre P1, Torvaldsen S1, Melot V2

1National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance of Vaccine Preventable Diseases, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Westmead Australia and 2GlaxoSmithKline Australia, Dandenong Australia

 

Adolescent and adult pertussis has become increasingly recognised as a cause of morbidity. Pertussis is undernotified in older children, so the burden of disease is poorly enumerated. 

Objective: To describe the burden of pertussis in children aged 5-14 years.

Methods:  A community-based telephone interview of parents of 2,020 children aged 5-14 years in Western Sydney.  Anti-PT and FHA IgG antibody ELISA technique was performed on 149 children. The Centres for Diseases control (CDC) clinical case definition for pertussis was used for the analysis of symptoms.

Results: 14% (281/2020) of children met the CDC definition for pertussis.  Children aged 5-9 years were more likely (p<0.001) to meet the case definition (16%, 190/1167) compared to children aged 10-14 years (11%, 91/856).  Exposure to a pertussis case was higher in 10-14 year olds with a cough of 2 weeks or more  (4.4%, 7/160) compared to 5-9 year olds (0.4%, 1/280, P<0.01).  Of children meeting the CDC definition for pertussis who saw a doctor, whooping cough was diagnosed in only 1% (3/261). Serology showed increased susceptibility to pertussis in older children.

Conclusion:  The higher prevalence of cough symptoms in younger children probably reflects the generally higher prevalence all-cause respiratory infections in this age group.  High risk of pertussis in older children is reflected in the much higher rate of known pertussis exposure in the age group 10-14 years.  Pertussis is significantly under-diagnosed in older children, who remain an important reservoir for infection. A booster dose of vaccine should be considered in this age group.

 

 
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