Journal article

Imperfect vaccine-induced immunity and whooping cough transmission to infants

Whooping cough, caused by B. pertussis and B. parapertussis, has increased in incidence throughout much of the developed world since the 1980s despite high vaccine coverage, causing an increased risk of infection in infants who have substantial disease-induced mortality. Duration of immunity and epidemically significant routes of transmission across age groups remain unclear and deserve further investigation to inform vaccination strategies to better control pertussis burden. The authors analyze age- and species-specific whooping cough tests and vaccine histories in Massachusetts from 1990 to 2008. On average, the disease-free duration is 10.5 years. However, it has been decreasing over time, possibly due to a rising force of infection through increased circulation. Despite the importance of teenage cases during epidemics, wavelet analyses suggest that they are not the most important source of transmission to infants. In addition, the data indicate that the B. pertussis vaccine is not protective against disease induced by B. parapertussis.

Languages

  • English

Publication year

2010

Journal

Vaccine

Volume

1

Type

Journal article

Categories

  • Service delivery

Diseases

  • Pertussis

Countries

  • United States

Tags

  • Disease surveillance

WHO Regions

  • Region of the Americas

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Added on: 2015-10-19 05:51:55

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