Title: Pertussis in Adolescents and Adults Consideration of Tdap
1Pertussis in Adolescents and AdultsConsideration
of Tdap
National Immunization Program Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
2Whooping Cough -- Pertussis
- Severe, debilitating cough illness lasting weeks
to months (100 day cough) - Gram-negative bacillus, Bordetella pertussis
- Characterized by paroxysms of cough, vomiting,
inspiratory whoop apnea in young infants - Worldwide occurrence, affects any age
- Deaths primarily among infants
3Pertussis Challenges
- Surveillance
- reliance on clinical case definitions low rate
of culture positive cases - Disease control strategies
- Limited options for antibiotic prophylaxis
- Effective against transmission less so against
disease - Vaccine
- Targets infants/children
- No vaccine for adolescents and adults
4Pertussis Challenges
- Education
- Under recognition of pertussis
- Diagnostics
- Obtaining adequate specimen
- Culture backup PCR no QC, standards
- Individual morbidity
- Symptoms, hospitalizations among
adolescents/adults - High risk groups outside infancy not well
characterized (except nosocomial)
5Timeline -- Tdap
- BLA submitted
- GlaxoSmithKline Boostrix, 10-18 years of age
(July 7, 2004) - Aventis-Pasteur Adacel, 11-64 years of age
(August 12, 2004) - FDA Vaccine and Related Biologics Advisory
Committee - March 15, 2005
6ACIP Pertussis (Tdap) Working Group
- Formed June 2004 11 meetings
- Members 20 (ACIP, FDA, DoD, HRSA, HIS, NIH and
CDC-NIP) - Consultants 13 (AAP, AAFP, AAHP, ACOG, ACP,
CNACI, HICPAC, IDSA, NMA, state DOHs) - Presentations working group, industry, academia,
state DOHs,
7Charge to the Working Group
- Consider strategies to improve prevention and
control of pertussis in the United States using
acellular pertussis vaccines formulated for
adolescents and adults . - Fully implemented childhood program of
vaccination with DTaP
8Stepwise Approach
- Adolescents first
- Replace Td with Tdap
- Then, selective recommendations
- Health care workers (? others)
- Protection of infants through vaccination of
adults - Recommendations for adult populations
9Preference for Initial use of Tdap For
Adolescents-- Rationale
- High rates of endemic pertussis among adolescents
- Substantial morbidity among adolescents
- Tdap likely to be cost-effective from societal
perspective (perhaps cost saving) - Potential secondary benefits (reduce total burden
of endemic and epidemic pertussis)
10Reported Pertussis in Adolescents Surveillance
Data Outside MAAge 10-19 yrs 2000-2004
Incidence per 100,000 pop
State High year, n High year, incidence Low year, incidence
MA n1082 130 41
WI n1573 195 6
VT n150 168 32
CO n486 75 22
WA n271 31 5
MN n211 28 12
NETSS data, 2004 provisional
11- Pertussis in MA Adolescents
- Average Annual Incidence and
Cumulative Percent , 1996-2003
12Complications in Adolescents Reported with
Pertussis
MA -1 n314 MA - 2 n1679 Quebec n280
Cough Mean 3.4 mo 38 gt 1 mo _at_ dx 47 gt 9 wk
Pneumonia 2 2 2
Rib fracture 1 1
Loss of consciousness 1 0
Hospitalization 0.8 (n13) 1
At interview
13Pertussis in 314 MA AdolescentsMedical
Visits/Missed School/Work
- Medical visits 24 gt 3 visits
- Mean 2 visits (range 0-15 visits)
- Student missed school 83
- Mean 5.5 days (range 0.4-32 days)
- Parent/caretaker missed work 43
- Mean 2.4 days (range 0.1-25 days)
- 2nd parent/caretaker missed work 14
- Mean 1.8 days (range 0.1-11 days)
Lee G. et al CID 200439 1572-1580
14Statewide Pertussis Outbreak Wisconsin 2004
- Aggressive case finding and testing
- PCR available
- 5020 cases overall
- 111 hospitalizations (57 in infants age 0-5m)
- 2028 cases (40) in 10-19 year olds
- Rate 251/100,000
- 15 adolescents hospitalized
- 33 adolescents with pneumonia
Data from WI DPH, provisional
15Timeline June-October 2005 ACIP
- Tdap for adolescents
- Tdap for other age cohorts (including selective
high risk settings) - Reduce morbidity in adults, infants and in
selected high risk groups
16Acknowledgements
- Massachusetts Department of Public Health
- Susan Lett, MD, MPH
- Dara S. Friedman, PhD, MPH.
- Arquimedes Areche, MPH
- Stephanie Schauer, PhD
- Fond du Lac County Health Department
- Diane Cappozzo, RN
- Carol Schmidt, RN
- Warren Post, MD
- Wisconsin Division of Public Health
- Jeffrey P. Davis, MD
- Mark Sotir, PhD, MPH
- Daniel Hopfensperger
- Alexandra Newman, DVM, MPH.
- Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene
- David Warshauer, PhD
- Tim Monson, MS
17AcknowledgementsCDC-NIP Pertussis Team
- Karen Broder
- Amanda Cohn
- Margaret Cortese
- Katrina Kretsinger
- Christine Miljelski
- John Moran
- Trudy Murphy
- Pekka Nuorti
- Martha Roper
- Barbara Slade
- Pamela Srivastava
- Tej Tiwari