Asymptomatic Bordetella pertussis infections in a longitudinal cohort of young African infants and their mothers

Author:

Gill Christopher J1ORCID,Gunning Christian E2ORCID,MacLeod William B1,Mwananyanda Lawrence13,Thea Donald M1,Pieciak Rachel C1,Kwenda Geoffrey4,Mupila Zacharia3,Rohani Pejman256

Affiliation:

1. Boston University School of Public Health, Department of Global Health, Boston, United States

2. University of Georgia, Odum School of Ecology, Athens, Georgia

3. Right to Care, Lusaka, Zambia

4. University of Zambia, School of Health Sciences, Department of Biomedical Science, Lusaka, Zambia

5. University of Georgia, Center for the Ecology of Infectious Diseases, Athens, Georgia

6. University of Georgia, Department of Infectious Diseases, Athens, Georgia

Abstract

Recent pertussis resurgence in numerous countries may be driven by asymptomatic infections. Most pertussis surveillance studies are cross-sectional and cannot distinguish asymptomatic from pre-symptomatic infections. Longitudinal surveillance could overcome this barrier, providing more information about the true burden of pertussis at the population level. Here we analyze 17,442 nasopharyngeal samples from a longitudinal cohort of 1320 Zambian mother/infant pairs. Our analysis has two elements. First, we demonstrate that the full range of IS481 qPCR CT values provides insight into pertussis epidemiology, showing concordance of low and high CT results over time, within mother/infant pairs, and in relation to symptomatology. Second, we exploit these full-range qPCR data to demonstrate a high incidence of asymptomatic pertussis, including among infants. Our results demonstrate a wider burden of pertussis infection than we anticipated in this population, and expose key limitations of threshold-based interpretation of qPCR results in infectious disease surveillance.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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4. Epilogue

5. Pertussis infection in the united states: role for vaccination of adolescents and adults;Brooks;The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine,2006

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