PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Increased population prevalence of low pertussis toxin antibody levels in young children preceding a record pertussis epidemic in Australia.

  • Patricia Campbell,
  • Peter McIntyre,
  • Helen Quinn,
  • Linda Hueston,
  • Gwendolyn L Gilbert,
  • Jodie McVernon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035874
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4
p. e35874

Abstract

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BackgroundCross-sectional serosurveys using IgG antibody to pertussis toxin (IgG-PT) are increasingly being used to estimate trends in recent infection independent of reporting biases.Methods/principal findingsWe compared the age-specific seroprevalence of various levels of IgG-PT in cross-sectional surveys using systematic collections of residual sera from Australian diagnostic laboratories in 1997/8, 2002 and 2007 with reference to both changes in the pertussis vaccine schedule and the epidemic cycle, as measured by disease notifications. A progressive decline in high-level (≥62.5 EU/ml) IgG-PT prevalence from 19% (95% CI 16-22%) in 1997/98 to 12% (95% CI 11-14%) in 2002 and 5% (95% CI 4-6%) in 2007 was consistent with patterns of pertussis notifications in the year prior to each collection. Concomitantly, the overall prevalence of undetectable (Conclusions/significancePopulation seroprevalence of high levels of IgG-PT is accepted as a reliable indicator of pertussis disease activity over time within and between countries with varying diagnostic practices, especially in unimmunised age groups. Our novel findings suggest that increased prevalence of undetectable IgG-PT is an indicator of waning immunity useful for population level monitoring following introduction of acellular vaccines and/or schedule changes.