Are vaccination programs and isolate polymorphism linked to pertussis re-emergence?
Whooping cough remains an endemic disease, and the re-emergence of pertussis in older children and adolescents has been reported in several countries, despite high vaccine coverage. Polymorphism of Bordetella pertussis has been observed over time, and some characteristics of pertussis isolates have gradually diverged from the vaccine strains. The present review summarizes the current knowledge on B. pertussis variability in countries with different vaccination programs and discusses its potential impact on the recently observed increased incidence of whooping cough. No direct association between B. pertussis isolate variability and vaccination programs has been observed to date, except for shifts from fimbriae Fim2 to Fim3. More likely explanations for the re-emergence of pertussis include the change in the epidemiology and transmission patterns of pertussis in highly vaccinated populations, and a shift of disease from young children to adolescents and adults due to waning protective i
Related Questions
- How is the Office of Multicultural and Diversity Programs in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences linked with the Office of Minority Educational Affairs?
- After an adult has either been infected with or exposed to pertussis, is vaccination with Adacel recommended, and if so when?
- Which strategy for pertussis vaccination today?