| Literature DB >> 26291475 |
Tami H Skoff, Joan Baumbach, Paul R Cieslak.
Abstract
Despite high coverage with pertussis-containing vaccines, pertussis remains endemic to the United States. There have been increases in reported cases in recent years, punctuated by striking epidemics and shifting epidemiology, both of which raise questions about current policies regarding its prevention and control. Limited data on pertussis reported through the National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System have proved insufficient to answer these questions. To address shortcomings of national pertussis data, the Emerging Infections Program at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention launched Enhanced Pertussis Surveillance (EPS), which is characterized by systematic case ascertainment, augmented data collection, and collection of Bordetella pertussis isolates. Data collected through EPS have been instrumental in understanding the rapidly evolving epidemiology and molecular epidemiology of pertussis and have contributed essential information regarding pertussis vaccines. EPS also serves as a platform for conducting critical and timely evaluations of pertussis prevention and control strategies, including targeting of vaccinations and antimicrobial prophylaxis.Entities:
Keywords: Bordetella pertussis; EIP; Emerging Infections Program; Enhanced Pertussis Surveillance; National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System; bacteria; pertussis; preventable bacterial disease; surveillance; vaccine; whooping cough
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26291475 PMCID: PMC4550149 DOI: 10.3201/eid2109.150023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Reported pertussis cases from the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System, United States, 1922–2013. Inset show cases during 1990–2013. Data for 1950–2013 were obtained from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System and Supplemental Pertussis Surveillance System. Data for 1922–1949 were obtained from passive reports to the US Public Health Service. DTP, diphtheria and tetanus toxoids combined with whole-cell pertussis vaccine; DTaP, diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis vaccine; Tdap, reduced-dose acellular pertussis vaccine combined with tetanus and diphtheria toxoids.
Completeness of pertussis surveillance data collected from the NNDSS and EPS, United States, 2011–2012*
| Characteristic | Complete, %† | Difference, % | |
|---|---|---|---|
| NNDSS‡ | EPS | ||
| Race | 76 | 91 | 15 |
| Ethnicity | 72 | 93 | 11 |
| Any cough | 79 | 100 | 21 |
| Paroxysms | 78 | 100 | 22 |
| Whoop | 74 | 97 | 23 |
| Post-tussive vomiting | 75 | 99 | 24 |
| Primary symptoms known§ | 72 | 96 | 24 |
| Cough onset date | 66 | 100 | 34 |
| Duration of cough | 71 | 100 | 29 |
| Hospitalized | 73 | 99 | 26 |
| ≥1 vaccine date and type, age range 3 mo–7 y | 71 | 99 | 28 |
*Data were obtained from Kamiya et al. (7). NNDSS, National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System; EPS, Enhanced Pertussis Surveillance. All p values for comparisons were <0.0001. †Unknown or missing responses were considered incomplete. ‡NNDSS completeness calculation excludes data from EPS area. §Cough, paroxysms, whoop, and post-tussive vomiting
Figure 2Overall and age-specific pertussis incidences, United States, 2012, from the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS) and Enhanced Pertussis Surveillance (EPS). Overall incidence for 2012. NNDSS: 15.4 cases/100,000 population (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, NNDSS and Supplemental Pertussis Surveillance System, and 1922–1949 passive reports to the US Public Health Service). EPS: 42.0 cases/100,000 population (Emerging Infection Program, EPS for Colorado, Connecticut, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, and Oregon).