Abstract
Abstract
Background
Disease surveillance is central to the public health understanding of pertussis epidemiology. In Canada, public reporting practices have significantly changed over time, creating challenges in accurately characterizing pertussis epidemiology. Debate has emerged over whether pertussis resurged after the introduction of adsorbed pertussis vaccines (1981–1985), and if the incidence fell to its pre-1985 after the introduction of acellular pertussis vaccines (1997–1998). Here, we aim to assemble a unified picture of pertussis disease incidence in Canada.
Methods
Using publicly available pertussis surveillance reports, we collected, analyzed and presented Canadian pertussis data for the period (1924–2015), encompassing the pre-vaccine era, introduction of vaccine, changes to vaccine technology, and the introduction of booster doses. Information on age began to be reported since 1952, but age reporting practices (full, partial or no ages) have evolved over time, and varied across provinces/territories. For those cases reported without age each year, we impute an age distribution by assuming it follows that of the age-reported cases.
Results
Below the age of 20 years, the adjusted age-specific incidence from 1969 to 1988 is substantially higher than existing estimates. In children < 1 year, the incidence in some years was comparable to that during the 1988–1999 resurgence.
Conclusions
The results presented here suggest that the surge in the average yearly incidence of pertussis that began in 1988 was weaker than previously inferred, and in contrary to the past findings, below age 5, the average yearly incidence of pertussis from 1999 to 2015 (when the incidence dropped again) has been lower than it was from 1969 to 1988.
Funder
National Sciences and Engineering Research Council
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Reference34 articles.
1. Anderson RM, May RM. Infectious diseases of humans. 1st ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1991.
2. Kretzschmar M, Teunis PFM, Pebody RG. Incidence and reproduction numbers of pertussis: estimates from serological and social contact data in five European countries. PLoS Med. 2010;7:e1000291.
3. CDC, Pertussis (Whooping Cough), https://www.cdc.gov/pertussis/index.html.
4. Gabutti G, Azzari C, Bonanni P, Prato E, Tozzi AE, Zanetti A, Zuccotti G. Current perspectives on epidemiology and prevention. Hum Vaccin Immunother. 2015;11(1):108–17.
5. Sockett PN, Garnett MJ, Scott C. Communicable disease surveillance: Notification of infectious diseases in Canada. Can J Infect Dis. 1992;7:293–5.