Issue: October 2014
September 18, 2014
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Tdap cocooning against pertussis effective in Australian cohort

Issue: October 2014
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Recent data show a government-funded cocoon program was effective in protecting newborns from pertussis during an epidemic in New South Wales, Australia.

Helen E. Quinn, PhD, MAE, of the National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases in Westmead, Australia, and colleagues determined receipt and timing of Tdap vaccination among parents or close contact adults of 217 infants diagnosed with pertussis between April 2009 and March 2011. Researchers age-matched 585 children and their parents to serve as the control. Parents were interviewed to establish timing and receipt of Tdap vaccination. Parents were considered immunized if they received Tdap at least 4 weeks before pertussis onset.

There was a similar proportion of mothers in the case and control groups who received Tdap vaccine at any time (76% vs. 79%). However, 22% of case mothers received Tdap at least 4 weeks before onset compared with 32% of control mothers. Further, more mothers in the control group received Tdap vaccination before pregnancy than those in the case group (20% vs. 12%).

Fathers in the case group were also less likely to receive Tdap vaccine at least 4 weeks before pertussis onset compared with fathers in the control (20% vs. 31%).

Most siblings who lived in case (92%) and control (93%) households received at least three doses of a pertussis-containing vaccine.

Analysis indicated having both parents immunized had a protective effect against pertussis of 51% (95% CI, 10-73). Adjusting for the father’s status indicated an immunized mother alone had a protective effect of 48% (95% CI, –2 to 74). An immunized father alone had a protective effect of 5% (95% CI, –79 to 50) after adjusting for mother’s status.

A mother who was vaccinated before pregnancy had a vaccine effectiveness of 42% (95% CI, –24 to 73). If the father also was vaccinated 4 weeks before pertussis onset, the combined protective effect was 51% (95% CI, 0-76).

“Our study provides evidence of a moderate reduction in the risk of laboratory-confirmed pertussis in infants aged less than 4 months whose parents have been booster immunized with acellular pertussis vaccine at least 4 weeks earlier,” the researchers concluded.

Disclosure: Some of the researchers report financial ties with GlaxoSmithKline.