Pertussis Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Open-Label Non-Inferiority Study to Examine the Impact of Pertussis Vaccination of Healthcare Workers on Post-exposure Prophylaxis
The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness of two strategies of post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) in healthcare workers (HCWs) who have been vaccinated with acellular pertussis vaccine and have been exposed to pertussis Secondary Objectives include a comparison of the costs of each PEP strategy and an assessment for risk factors associated with healthcare-associated acquisition of pertussis.
Pertussis, caused by the bacterium Bordetella pertussis, is an acute respiratory tract
infection transmitted to susceptible persons through aerosolized respiratory droplets and
direct contact with respiratory secretions. Classic pertussis disease is characterized by
three phases of illness: the catarrhal phase where persons note cough and coryza; the
paroxysmal phase where persons develop a spasmodic cough with post-tussive vomiting and an
inspiratory whoop; and the convalescent phase, during which symptoms slowly resolve. The
risk of transmission of the organism is compounded by the nondescript nature of symptoms
early in the course of illness, particularly in adults. Classically recognized as a disease
of infants and children ("whooping cough"), the incidence of pertussis infection in
adolescents and adults has increased in recent years. Persons >15 years of age now make up
more than twenty percent of reported cases. This increase is likely due to several factors,
including waning protection from childhood vaccination and natural infection, an increased
appreciation for disease in adolescents and adults, and the improved ability of clinicians
to diagnose pertussis recognition through the use of serologic methods.
Healthcare workers (HCWs) are at increased risk for acquiring pertussis infection due to
regular contact with infected patients and waning protection from childhood vaccination or
from natural pertussis infection. Healthcare-associated outbreaks of pertussis have also
been increasingly recognized and have been reported from a diverse range of healthcare
facilities. Such outbreaks are often due to under-recognition of pertussis with subsequent
failure to isolate suspected cases, waning immunity from childhood vaccination or disease,
and the increasing incidence of pertussis infection in adults and adolescents. Infected HCWs
can then serve as vectors of infection to other susceptible contacts including patients,
other employees, and even their own children.
Vaccination is an effective tool for the prevention of pertussis. In 2005, two tetanus
toxoid, reduced diphtheria toxoid, and reduced antigen quantity acellular pertussis vaccines
(Tdap) were licensed for use in adolescents and adults. In view of the increasingly
recognized problem of healthcare-associated and transmitted pertussis infection, the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
(ACIP) targeted HCWs as a priority group for pertussis vaccination in 2006, primarily to
reduce the risk of spread of pertussis within health care institutions.
Until the licensure of Tdap, the only method to reduce transmission of pertussis after
healthcare-associated exposure to persons with pertussis was post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP)
with antibiotics and employee furlough. Close contacts exposed to a pertussis-infected
patient or staff member are routinely treated with macrolide therapy (erythromycin or
azithromycin), and exposed HCWs who develop a cough-illness are restricted from work for 5
days while on antibiotic therapy. PEP is believed to prevent symptomatic infection in the
exposed person if administered within 21 days of cough onset. Traditionally, decisions
regarding PEP for exposed HCWs involve detailed assessments of the degree of patient
contact, the risk for development of severe or complicated pertussis, and regular evaluation
and follow-up for the occurrence of symptoms. These are often time-consuming efforts that
are usually the responsibility of infection control or occupational health personnel. With
the licensure of Tdap and with the recommended vaccination of HCWs, it is now hoped that
vaccination will eliminate the need to provide antibiotic PEP, particularly in
recently-vaccinated HCWs. However, this has not been confirmed with a randomized clinical
trial, and, therefore, no definitive formal recommendation can be made regarding
modifications of PEP in vaccinated HCWs. Two potential strategies exist for the management
of vaccinated HCWs following an exposure to a person with pertussis: a) provision of
universal antibiotic therapy or b) careful daily observation of vaccinated HCWs for the
development of symptoms without antibiotic prescription. A comparison of these two
strategies will be the focus of this study.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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