Publicaciones Andrés Esteban Zabala Parreño

Bordetella Pertussis, A Reemerging Pathogen In Pediatric Respiratory Infections. A Study In Quito, Ecuador
REVISTA
REVISTA ARGENTINA DE MICROBIOLOGIA

Publicación
2020-11-24
Bordetella pertussis is the causative agent of pertussis, which mainly affects unvaccinated children, while Bordetella parapertussis causes a disease presenting clinical characteristics that are indistinguishable from whooping cough. Despite high vaccination coverage, pertussis remains a public health concern worldwide, with approximately 140 000 cases reported annually. Here we determined the prevalence of B. pertussis and B. parapertussis infection among infants under one year of age by polymerase chain reaction (PCR); our aim being to identify whether the data obtained relates to the relevant sociodemographic and clinical data. The study included 86 samples of nasopharyngeal swabs from infants aged between 0---12 months, who were reported as probable cases of whooping cough by the health centers around the Ecuadorian highlands, from August 2016 to July 2017. The nasopharyngeal swabs were cultured and microbiological and molecular analyses were performed. B. pertussis was identified by PCR in 41% of the samples (30/86), more than half of which corresponded to infants aged between 0---3 months. Moreover, a statistically significant correlation (p < 0.05) between the identification of bacteria in culture and the catarrhal stage of the disease was observed. The results obtained from the study highlighted the need for an active national surveillance of pertussis,in particular for laboratory testing, to provide a highly sensitive and more specific diagnosis of Bordetella infection.