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Estimating the Duration of Pertussis Immunity Using Epidemiological Signatures

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  • Helen J Wearing
  • Pejman Rohani

Abstract

Case notifications of pertussis have shown an increase in a number of countries with high rates of routine pediatric immunization. This has led to significant public health concerns over a possible pertussis re-emergence. A leading proposed explanation for the observed increase in incidence is the loss of immunity to pertussis, which is known to occur after both natural infection and vaccination. Little is known, however, about the typical duration of immunity and its epidemiological implications. Here, we analyze a simple mathematical model, exploring specifically the inter-epidemic period and fade-out frequency. These predictions are then contrasted with detailed incidence data for England and Wales. We find model output to be most sensitive to assumptions concerning naturally acquired immunity, which allows us to estimate the average duration of immunity. Our results support a period of natural immunity that is, on average, long-lasting (at least 30 years) but inherently variable.Author Summary: The eradication of vaccine-preventable infectious diseases remains an important public health priority. To achieve this goal, the level of immunity afforded needs to be high and long-lasting. For pertussis, one of the leading causes of mortality in infants, immunity has been shown to wane in some individuals. The epidemiological impacts of this observation depend critically on the duration of protective immunity in the entire population, which remains notoriously difficult to estimate. We approach this problem by exploring the agreement between model dynamics and case notification data from England & Wales. Our estimates suggest the average duration of immunity is much longer than is currently thought (at least 30 years), but that some individuals would lose immunity quite rapidly.

Suggested Citation

  • Helen J Wearing & Pejman Rohani, 2009. "Estimating the Duration of Pertussis Immunity Using Epidemiological Signatures," PLOS Pathogens, Public Library of Science, vol. 5(10), pages 1-11, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:ppat00:1000647
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1000647
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