Emerging Infectious Diseases (Mar 2021)

Isolate-Based Surveillance of Bordetella pertussis, Austria, 2018–2020

  • 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

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2703.202314
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 3
pp. 862 – 871

Abstract

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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.

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