Abstract

BackgroundThe introduction of the acellular pertussis vaccine may have changed the epidemiological and clinical features of pertussis in Canadian children.ObjectiveTo describe the demographics, clinical presentation and outcomes of children and adolescents with pertussis presenting to a tertiary care hospital.MethodsRetrospective cohort of consecutive patients evaluated at the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Sainte-Justine (CHUSJ) and tested with a bacterial multiplex real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for Bordetella pertussis or B. parapertussis between June 2015 and March 2017. Demographics, clinical presentations and outcomes were described for positive test results. The Modified Preziosi Scale was used to assess disease severity; severe disease was defined as a score ≥7.ResultsThe age distribution of the 144 positive patients with a clinical encounter at CHUSJ was as follows: less than three months (n=25/144, 17.4%), four months to nine years (n=63/144, 43.8%) and 10 to 18 years (n=56/144, 38.9%). The most common symptoms at presentation were paroxysmal cough (70.1%), post-tussive emesis (47.2%) and coryza (33.3%). Over 84.0% of cases in infants less than three months of age had severe pertussis (92.0% required hospitalization and 28.0% intensive care admission). In children four months to nine years of age, 22.2% had severe pertussis and 11.1% required hospitalization. Only two (3.6%) children greater than 10 years had severe disease.ConclusionPertussis still affects children of all ages in Quebec. In older children, it tends to be a milder disease. When it affects infants, who do not yet have full protection from pertussis vaccination, it often causes severe disease, especially in those less than three months of age. This evidence further supports the implementation of a pertussis vaccination program in pregnant women.

Highlights

  • Pertussis, or whooping cough, is a respiratory tract infection caused by Bordetella pertussis and B. parapertussis

  • When it affects infants, who do not yet have full protection from pertussis vaccination, it often causes severe disease, especially in those less than three months of age. This evidence further supports the implementation of a pertussis vaccination program in pregnant women

  • Of the 1,526 multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests performed between June 11, 2015 and March 31, 2017, 173 patients were positive or equivocal for B. pertussis or B. parapertussis (11.3% positivity)

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Summary

Introduction

Whooping cough, is a respiratory tract infection caused by Bordetella pertussis and B. parapertussis. Vaccination against pertussis with a whole cell vaccine, which was introduced in Canada in 1943, led to a significant decrease in the disease incidence [3]. The whole cell vaccine was replaced with the acellular pertussis vaccine in the late 1990s to decrease the incidence of adverse events following immunization. In Quebec, the universal acellular vaccination program was introduced in 1998 with a marked impact on pertussis incidence [4,5,6]. In 2016, despite vaccination coverage of 97.3% in children at one year of age [7], the incidence of pertussis in those less than 18 years of age was still 60 cases per 100,000 children [8]. The introduction of the acellular pertussis vaccine may have changed the epidemiological and clinical features of pertussis in Canadian children

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