Pertussis (Whooping cough)
- Notify Public Health.
- For contact prophylaxis recommendations, see Prophylaxis for Contacts of Communicable Diseases.
- Persistent cough (≥ 6 days) in adolescents may indicate whooping cough in up to 32%, even in immunized individuals especially if last pertussis vaccination more than 5 years prior.
- Typical course of pertussis:
1) catarrhal phase - lasts 1-2 weeks; most contagious
2) paroxysmal phase - 3-6 weeks. Many children < 6 months of age do not develop paroxysmal cough or inspiratory whoop.
3) convalescent phase - > 6 weeks (mean duration of cough is 6 weeks).
Diagnosis
- cough present for up to 3 weeks - order culture and PCR of posterior nasopharynx (aspirate/swab).
- cough present > 3 weeks - order PCR (beyond 4 weeks, PCR likely to be negative).
Antibiotic therapy
- Antibiotic therapy may reduce the duration or severity of symptoms (only if started in catarrhal phase) and limits transmission to susceptible contacts. Because viable organisms can be recovered from untreated patients for 3 weeks after onset of cough, a 5-7 day course of antibiotics is recommended during the first 4 weeks of illness.
- For individuals likely to be in contact with high risk contacts (infants, pregnant women in 3rd trimester, health care workers, child care workers who care for infants), a 5-7 day course of antibiotics is recommended during the 6-8 weeks after onset of illness.
Bordetella pertussis
Treatment
Empiric Therapy | Dose | Duration |
---|---|---|
<6 months | ||
Azithromycin | 10mg/kg (max 500mg) PO daily | 5 days |
≥6 months | ||
10mg/kg PO first day (max 500mg) then | ||
5mg/kg PO daily (max 250mg) x 4 days | ||
or | ||
Clarithromycin | 15mg/kg/d PO div bid | 7 days |
Alternative
Empiric Therapy | Duration | |
---|---|---|
TMP/SMX (if > 1 month old) | 8mg TMP/kg/d PO div bid | 10 days |