Pertussis-Associated Pneumonia in Infants and Children From Low- and Middle-Income Countries Participating in the PERCH Study.

Breanna Barger-Kamate; Maria Deloria Knoll; E Wangeci Kagucia; Christine Prosperi; Henry C Baggett; W Abdullah Brooks; Daniel R Feikin; Laura L Hammitt; Stephen RC Howie; Orin S Levine; +27 more... Shabir A Madhi; J Anthony G Scott ORCID logo; Donald M Thea; Tussanee Amornintapichet; Trevor P Anderson; Juliet O Awori; Vicky L Baillie; James Chipeta; Andrea N DeLuca; Amanda J Driscoll; Doli Goswami; Melissa M Higdon; Lokman Hossain; Ruth A Karron; Susan Maloney; David P Moore; Susan C Morpeth; Lawrence Mwananyanda; Ogochukwu Ofordile; Emmanuel Olutunde; Daniel E Park; Samba O Sow; Milagritos D Tapia; David R Murdoch; Katherine L O'Brien; Karen L Kotloff; Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health (PERCH) Study Group; (2016) Pertussis-Associated Pneumonia in Infants and Children From Low- and Middle-Income Countries Participating in the PERCH Study. Clinical infectious diseases, 63 (suppl ). S187-S196. ISSN 1058-4838 DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciw546
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BACKGROUND:  Few data exist describing pertussis epidemiology among infants and children in low- and middle-income countries to guide preventive strategies. METHODS:  Children 1-59 months of age hospitalized with World Health Organization-defined severe or very severe pneumonia in 7 African and Asian countries and similarly aged community controls were enrolled in the Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health study. They underwent a standardized clinical evaluation and provided nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal swabs and induced sputum (cases only) for Bordetella pertussis polymerase chain reaction. Risk factors and pertussis-associated clinical findings were identified. RESULTS:  Bordetella pertussis was detected in 53 of 4200 (1.3%) cases and 11 of 5196 (0.2%) controls. In the age stratum 1-5 months, 40 (2.3% of 1721) cases were positive, all from African sites, as were 8 (0.5% of 1617) controls. Pertussis-positive African cases 1-5 months old, compared to controls, were more often human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) uninfected-exposed (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 2.2), unvaccinated (aOR, 3.7), underweight (aOR, 6.3), and too young to be immunized (aOR, 16.1) (all P ≤ .05). Compared with pertussis-negative African cases in this age group, pertussis-positive cases were younger, more likely to vomit (aOR, 2.6), to cough ≥14 days (aOR, 6.3), to have leukocyte counts >20 000 cells/µL (aOR, 4.6), and to have lymphocyte counts >10 000 cells/µL (aOR, 7.2) (all P ≤ .05). The case fatality ratio of pertussis-infected pneumonia cases 1-5 months of age was 12.5% (95% confidence interval, 4.2%-26.8%; 5/40); pertussis was identified in 3.7% of 137 in-hospital deaths among African cases in this age group. CONCLUSIONS:  In the postneonatal period, pertussis causes a small fraction of hospitalized pneumonia cases and deaths; however, case fatality is substantial. The propensity to infect unvaccinated infants and those at risk for insufficient immunity (too young to be vaccinated, premature, HIV-infected/exposed) suggests that the role for maternal vaccination should be considered along with efforts to reduce exposure to risk factors and to optimize childhood pertussis vaccination coverage.


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