Volume 23, Number 11—November 2017
Dispatch
Emergence of Bordetella holmesii as a Causative Agent of Whooping Cough, Barcelona, Spain
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Alba Mir-Cros, Gema Codina, M. Teresa Martín-Gómez, Anna Fàbrega , Xavier Martínez, Mireia Jané, Diego Van Esso, Thais Cornejo, Carlos Rodrigo, Magda Campins, Tomàs Pumarola, and Juan José González-López
Abstract
We describe the detection of Bordetella holmesii as a cause of whooping cough in Spain. Prevalence was 3.9% in 2015, doubling to 8.8% in 2016. This emergence raises concern regarding the contribution of B. holmesii to the reemergence of whooping cough and the effectiveness of the pertussis vaccine.
Whooping cough is a highly contagious respiratory disease, primarily caused by Bordetella pertussis (1). Other species, such as B. parapertussis and B. holmesii, have been recognized as causes of a syndrome that clinically resembles that of whooping cough (1,2). Pertussis is the term used for the disease specifically caused by B. pertussis, whereas pertussis-like illness or syndrome is more appropriately used when referring to the other etiologic agents. B. holmesii, a poorly studied pathogen, was originally identified in 1995 as a rare cause of bacteremia (3). Since then, it has been related to other invasive diseases, especially in asplenic and immunosuppressed patients and in healthy people with pertussis-like symptoms (4).
Microbiologic diagnosis of whooping cough by molecular tests provides a higher sensitivity and promptness than culture techniques, with PCR being the method most commonly used in clinical laboratories (5). Most molecular diagnostic kits used to detect B. pertussis target insertion sequence IS481, which is present in high copy numbers in the B. pertussis genome (6). However, IS481 is not a specific target of B. pertussis because it is also found in other Bordetella species, including B. holmesii, leading to underestimation of this pathogen in this clinical scenario (6).
To date, several cases of B. holmesii associated with pertussis-like illness have been reported in North and South America, Asia, Africa, and Europe (4). Additionally, 2 important outbreaks of B. holmesii infection associated with pertussis-like illness were detected in France and Ohio (7,8). Recent reports of the detection of positive cases of B. holmesii infection in the Netherlands (9), which previous analysis had failed to identify (10), reinforce the emergence of this pathogen. To our knowledge, the presence of this microorganism in Spain has not been documented. We report the emergence of B. holmesii as a causative agent of whooping cough in the metropolitan area of Barcelona, Spain.
We evaluated 391 nasopharyngeal samples from patients from the metropolitan area of Barcelona who had a clinical and laboratory-confirmed diagnosis of whooping cough during January 2013–December 2016 at the Hospital Vall d’Hebron. All the samples were positive by the IS481-based SmartBp/Bpp (Cepheid, Sunnyvale, CA, USA) real-time PCR and thus were considered positive for B. pertussis.
We reevaluated all the samples by using species-specific multiplex real-time PCR (10). This method detects the promoter of the pertussis toxin operon (ptxAPr), which is specific for B. pertussis, and the recA gene (Bh-RecA), specific for B. holmesii. To corroborate the identification of B. holmesii, we further analyzed all the Bh-RecA RT-PCR–positive samples by sequencing an internal fragment of the housekeeping gene encoding the ribonucleoside-diphosphate reductase α chain (nrdA), which is useful for discriminating among the different species of Bordetella (11), and the Bh-RecA gene. The study was approved by the Clinical Research Ethics Committee of the hospital.
Among the 391 nasopharyngeal samples analyzed, 380 (97.2%) were confirmed positive for B. pertussis and 16 (4.1%) for B. holmesii. Among the B. holmesii–positive samples, 5 were positive for B. pertussis and B. holmesiiand 1 for B. parapertussis, B. holmesii, and Streptococcus pyogenes (Figure).
None of the B. holmesii–positive cases was detected during 2013–2014. In total, 7 cases were reported in 2015, corresponding to 3.9% of whooping cough cases diagnosed in 2015, and the remaining 9 cases were reported in 2016, accounting for 8.8% of the cases diagnosed during that year (Figure).
Ten (62.5%) of the 16 B. holmesii–positive patients were female; the median age was 9 years (range 1–40 years), and 87.5% were pediatric patients (<14 years). Fourteen cases were detected in the context of a school-related (85.7%) or family (35.7%) outbreak; 3 of these cases were detected in both kinds of outbreaks.
Vaccination status was available for 14 of the 16 patients. Of these, all cases occurred in children 14 months to 14 years of age who had received a median of 5 doses of pertussis vaccine (range 2–5 doses) according to the current vaccination program (5 doses, administered at 2, 4, and 6 months and at 1.5 and 6 years of age). The median time since the last vaccination was 4.5 years (range 0.7–14.1 years) (Table 1). No cases of complications or malignant pertussis-like disease occurred. Information about antimicrobial therapy received was available for 15 patients, all of whom had been treated with azithromycin, and no patient experienced therapeutic failure or relapse.
No statistical differences were observed between age, clinical features, and vaccination status among the case-patients with B. holmesii and B. pertussisinfections (Table 2). However, B. holmesii infections tended to be more prevalent in older children (median age 9 vs. 5.5 years; p = 0.07) compared with B. pertussis infections.
B. holmesii is an underdiagnosed emerging respiratory pathogen that triggers clinical manifestations similar to those caused by B. pertussis (1). In this retrospective study, we detected 10 cases in which B. holmesii was found to be the only putative agent of a pertussis-like infection and 6 cases in which B. holmesii was co-detected with another causative agent of whooping cough. We observed no differences in the demographics, clinical features, and vaccination status among patients infected by B. holmesii and B. pertussis, but a trend toward higher involvement of B. holmesii infections was observed in older children, as reported previously (7,8).
We found that 4.1% of the respiratory samples from patients with laboratory-confirmed whooping cough during 2013–2016 were positive for B. holmesii, for which detection was reported from April 2015 onward. The number of positive cases of B. holmesii infection doubled from 3.9% in 2015 to 8.8% in 2016. Of note, 2015 was considered the year with the highest incidence of whooping cough since the introduction of the acellular vaccine in Spain. In the autonomous community of Catalonia, incidence (cases/100,000 inhabitants) was 13.3 for 2013, 14.8 for 2014, 48.9 for 2015, and 24.6 for 2016 (http://canalsalut.gencat.cat/ca/actualitat/llista_butlletins/salut_publica/butlleti_epidemiologic_de_catalunya).
Even in the absence of clear recommendations to treat pertussis-like respiratory infections caused by B. holmesii, several studies have reported controversial results about a possible lower activity of macrolides compared with other antimicrobial agents (4,12). Unfortunately, because we could not recover the bacterial isolates, we were unable to perform antimicrobial drug susceptibility testing. However, no evidence of complications or relapses was observed in any patient after treatment with azithromycin.
B. holmesii lacks most of the antigens present in the pertussis acellular vaccine or the proteins produced differ phenotypically (4). This situation, together with the lack of protection against replication observed in immunized mice (13), suggests the absence of cross-protection against B. holmesii infections. In our study, most of the patients had received the complete immunization schedule of 5 doses (Table 1). Thus, the increasing trend of whooping cough might be attributed not only to B. pertussis adaptation to the introduction of the acellular pertussis vaccine, decreased vaccine efficacy, or waning immunity, as previously reported (14,15), but also to the emergence of secondary pathogens, such as B. holmesii, which the pertussis vaccine might not prevent.
Our study describes the emergence of B. holmesii as a causative agent of whooping cough in Spain. Accurate diagnosis of the causative agent of this disease is crucial to determine the real incidence and prevalence of the microbial species involved, to assess its contribution to the epidemiology of whooping cough, to evaluate whether specific antimicrobial drug treatments should be implemented and, in terms of public health, to assess the efficacy of the pertussis vaccine.
Ms. Cros-Mir is a PhD student working at the Microbiology Group of the Hospital Vall d’Hebron Research Institute, Barcelona, Spain. Her research interests are the epidemiology and molecular characterization of Bordetella pertussis and other related species.
Acknowledgment
We are grateful to Pere Simon for providing part of the epidemiologic information. We are also grateful to Nicole Guiso for kindly providing a B. holmesiiisolate, which was used as the positive control for the PCR experiments.
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