Pertussis is a globally distributed infectious disease that is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality, especially in infants who are too young to be immunized. This disease is common in childhood, and when it occurs during the first few months of life, it leads to hospitalization and, sometimes, death. Brazil has adopted the strategy of maternal immunization against pertussis in late 2014. This study aims to analyze public data on the disease to determine whether there was an impact on the disease burden following the introduction of the vaccine Tdap in pregnant women and its magnitude. We performed a time-series analysis of the incidence of pertussis between October 2010 and January 2019. We stratified the population of interest into three groups: infants aged less than two months old, infants aged two to six months, and infants aged six months to one year, according to Brazil’s vaccination schedule. We found a protective effect of maternal vaccination in all age groups, more prominent on the first group. Before the intervention, infants under two months had a higher risk of getting pertussis in comparison with infants two to six months old (HR 1.15, CI 95%: 1.11-1.19). After the intervention, age under two months is a protective factor compared with two to six months (HR 0.90, CI 95%: 0.82-0.98). The pertussis incidence reduced in all age groups and all Brazil’s Regions.
【저자키워드】 vaccination in pregnancy, pertussis, Tdap vaccine,