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pertussis

Pertussis: No Longer “Whooping” But Still a Serious Public Health Problem

GREGORY W. RUTECKI, MD
University of South Alabama

Dr Rutecki is professor of medicine at the University of South Alabama College of Medicine in Mobile. He is also a member of the editorial board of CONSULTANT.

My generation as a resident (1974 to 1977) was rife with rheumatic heart disease. As a result, I was attuned to mitral stenosis because I heard it over and over. Next, we learned about treating beta-hemolytic Streptococcus infection, and the disease was dealt a blow.

Today, residents have no reference point for that telltale diastolic rumble. Conversely, even then, vaccination had all but eradicated pertussis, a disease many recent generations are not familiar with. It was an infant’s disease that we fixed.

Two things have unfortunately changed in recent years: pertussis is reemerging and a lapse in vaccination practices is responsible. Recent articles focus attention on this important “contemporary” disease.1,2

The year 2009 should serve as a wake-up call. It experienced 16,858 cases of pertussis, including 12 reported deaths.1 Although heightened awareness, increased reporting, and an innovation in diagnosis (polymerase chain reaction [PCR] testing) helped, waning immunity obtained from an infant/child vaccination series became a serious problem.1 That is why as many as 50% of those infected with Bordetella pertussis are adolescents and adults—who can then infect infants.

CLINICAL CLUES TO PERTUSSIS

The disease itself begins with a “catarrhal” phase that is nonspecific (malaise, rhinorrhea, and cough).1 Look for subtle signs such as excessive lacrimation and conjunctival injection as earlier signals (before the cough) to the presence of pertussis.1 The cough follows and can last as long as 48 days.1 Today’s adults do not “whoop.”1 Another clinical pearl is the presence of “posttussive emesis.”1 Can the cough be forceful? It has actually led to carotid artery dissection.1

DIAGNOSTIC TOOLS

Definitive diagnostic tools are available if strong diagnostic suspicion exists.1 If the catarrhal stage is present, order PCR plus culture. The coughing or paroxysmal stage uses PCR (unlikely to be positive after 1 month of infection) and serology. During convalescence, serology is the test of choice (a 2-fold increase in titer or without an acute-phase sample, a single elevated titer is acceptable).

FIRST-LINE THERAPY

The antibiotic of choice for pertussis is azithromycin.1 But there is more to the antibiotic story. Antibiotic use does not alter symptoms even with eradication of the organism.1 This is especially true 2 weeks or more after the infection begins.

STRATEGY FOR PREVENTION

Although primary care physicians should be aware that incidence of pertussis is increasing; that it is now also a disease of adolescents and adults; specifics regarding its clinical and laboratory diagnosis; and the antibiotic facts enumerated above, wouldn’t it be better to prevent it if we could? Since we are the gatekeepers of vaccination administration, there is a way.

The first article1 and a second2 offer sound advice in this regard. The current and most up-to-date recommendation for Tdap (tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis) boosters is to substitute a 1-time dose for the typically redundant (every 10 years) Td booster. This way, the waning immunity for B pertussis will be boosted in infection-prone adolescents and adults, the new reservoir for this nasty little bacterium. We are in a unique position to prevent as well as diagnose this resurgent disease. 


References

1. Paisley RD, Blaylock J, Hartzell JD. Whooping cough in adults: an update on a reemerging infection. Am J Med. 2012;125:141-143.

2. Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. Recommended adult immunization schedule: United States, 2012. Ann Intern Med. 2012;156:211-217.