| Literature DB >> 33622477 |
Adriana Cabal, Daniela Schmid, Markus Hell, Ali Chakeri, Elisabeth Mustafa-Korninger, Alexandra Wojna, Anna Stöger, Johannes Möst, Eva Leitner, Patrick Hyden, Thomas Rattei, Adele Habington, Ursula Wiedermann, Franz Allerberger, Werner Ruppitsch.
Abstract
Pertussis is a vaccine-preventable disease, and its recent resurgence might be attributable to the emergence of strains that differ genetically from the vaccine strain. We describe a novel pertussis isolate-based surveillance system and a core genome multilocus sequence typing scheme to assess Bordetella pertussis genetic variability and investigate the increased incidence of pertussis in Austria. During 2018-2020, we obtained 123 B. pertussis isolates and typed them with the new scheme (2,983 targets and preliminary cluster threshold of <6 alleles). B. pertussis isolates in Austria differed genetically from the vaccine strain, both in their core genomes and in their vaccine antigen genes; 31.7% of the isolates were pertactin-deficient. We detected 8 clusters, 1 of them with pertactin-deficient isolates and possibly part of a local outbreak. National expansion of the isolate-based surveillance system is needed to implement pertussis-control strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Austria; Bordetella pertussis; acellular vaccines; bacteria; cgMLST; clusters; core-genome multilocus sequence typing; respiratory infections; surveillance; vaccine-preventable diseases; vaccines
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33622477 PMCID: PMC7920692 DOI: 10.3201/eid2703.202314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883