| Literature DB >> 28749331 |
Jeanne Heil1,2, Henriëtte L G Ter Waarbeek1,2, Christian J P A Hoebe1,2, Peter H A Jacobs3, Dirk W van Dam4, Thera A M Trienekens5, Jochen W L Cals6, Inge H M van Loo2, Nicole H T M Dukers-Muijrers1,2.
Abstract
Pertussis is most severe among unvaccinated infants (< 1 year of age), and still leads to several reported deaths in the Netherlands every year. In order to avoid pertussis-related infant morbidity and mortality, pertussis surveillance data are used to guide pertussis control measures. However, more insight into the accuracy of pertussis surveillance and control, and into the range of healthcare and public health-related factors that impede this are needed. We analysed a unique combination of data sources from one Dutch region of 1.1 million residents, including data from laboratory databases and local public health notifications between 2010 and 2013. This large study (n = 12,090 pertussis tests) reveals possible misdiagnoses, substantial under-notification (18%, 412/2,301 laboratory positive episodes) and a delay between patient symptoms and notification to the local public health services (median 34 days, interquartile range (IQR): 27-54). It is likely that the misdiagnoses, under-notification and overall delay in surveillance data are not unique to this area of the Netherlands, and are generalisable to other countries in Europe. In addition to preventive measures such as maternal immunisation, based on current findings, we further recommend greater adherence to testing guidelines, standardisation of test interpretation guidelines, use of automatic notification systems and earlier preventive measures. This article is copyright of The Authors, 2017.Entities:
Keywords: Pertussis; general practitioners; infectious disease control; laboratory; surveillance; vaccine-preventable disease
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28749331 PMCID: PMC5545763 DOI: 10.2807/1560-7917.ES.2017.22.28.30571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Euro Surveill ISSN: 1025-496X
Pertussis testing, diagnostics and notification guidelines and criteria, the Netherlands, 2010–2013
| Actor | Responsibility | Guidelines/criteria |
|---|---|---|
|
| Clinical diagnostic | Patients with typical symptomsa or, during epidemics, patients with severe coughing who have had contact with a proven pertussis case [ |
| Requests for laboratory testing | When pertussis is suspected in a patient whose family includes unvaccinated or incompletely vaccinated infants < 1 year of age or a woman > 34 weeks pregnant [ | |
| Medical treatment of index case and/or at-risk contacts | First confirm the clinical diagnoses of the index case by laboratory test. In a possible index case whose family includes unvaccinated or incompletely vaccinated infants < 1 year of age, a woman > 34 weeks pregnant or a child with severe heart or lung failure, treatment is indicated for all family members and can start before laboratory confirmation of the index case. Medical treatment outside the family only occurs after PHS advice and laboratory confirmation of the index case [ | |
| Vaccination of at-risk contacts | Administer first vaccination prior to vaccination of NIP or administer vaccination to unvaccinated or incompletely vaccinated children < 5 years old in the family [ | |
| Notification of local PHS [ | Patients with typical symptom(s)a or with at least 14 days of coughing combined with either a positive laboratory test or contact within past three weeks with a confirmed pertussis case [ | |
|
| Laboratory diagnostics | Interpret as positive for pertussis when detection of |
| Notification of local PHS [ | Patients with typical symptom(s)a or with at least 14 days of coughing combined with either a positive laboratory test or contact within past three weeks with a confirmed pertussis case [ | |
|
| Surveillance | Collect notifications and clinical data from HCPs and laboratories and report it to RIVM [ |
| Medical treatment and/or vaccination advice to the patient’s HCP | Provide advice on medical treatment and vaccination according to national guidelines. |
HCP: healthcare provider; NIP: National Immunisation Programme; PHS: public health services; RIVM: National Institute for Public Health and the Environment.
a Typical symptoms include paroxysmal coughing, a whooping sound after coughing or vomiting after coughing [24].
b Single serological testing is not suitable to detect recent infection in individuals vaccinated with an acellular pertussis vaccine within the past year. Multiple serology is also recommended when the first titre is below the cut-off value specific for a pertussis infection [24].
Recommended tests and performed serology pertussis testing stratified into age groups, the Netherlands, 2010–2013
| Age group | Recommended test [ | Total number of performed tests | Number of performed serology tests (n = 11,190) | Percent of performed serology tests (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| PCR or culture | 303 | 134 | 44 |
|
| Serology | 11,787 | 11,056 | 94 |
|
| PCR |
Figure 1Possible pertussis episodesa considered positive, inconclusive and negative by laboratoriesb, the Netherlands, 2010–2013 (n = 12,090)
Standardised test results for possible pertussis episodes using serology with available IgG-titres, Limburg province, the Netherlands, 2010–2013
| Laboratory interpretation of possible episodes with IgG titres | Standardiseda result negative (n = 7,229) | Standardiseda result positive | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number (n) | Percent (%) | Variation between laboratories | Number (n) | Percent (%) | Variation between laboratories (range of %) | |
|
| 644 | 32 | 0–57b | 1,354 | 68 | 43–100b |
|
| 2,424 | 91 | 45–95c | 248 | 9 | 5–55c |
|
| 4,161 | 98 | 90–100 | 98 | 2 | 0–10 |
a Cut-off values of IgG ≥ 62.5 IU/ml and IgG ≥ 13 VU/ml were used for standardisation. A single high titre at/above these values was defined as positive. The standardised test result was considered positive when multiple serology was applied and all serology tests were positive, and it was considered negative when all serology tests applied were negative. When multiple serology test results were inconsistent, the standardised test result was considered positive when seroconversion occurred from a negative test to a positive test result.
b p < 0.01.
c p < 0.001.
Figure 2Median time of Bordetella pertussis and Bordetella parapertussis infection from first day of illness to notification of the RIVM, Limburg province, the Netherlands, 2010–2013