Comparison of Values of Antibody to Bordetella pertussis Antigens in Young German and American Men

JD Cherry, T Beer, SA Chartrand… - Clinical infectious …, 1995 - academic.oup.com
JD Cherry, T Beer, SA Chartrand, J DeVille, E Beer, MA Olsen, PD Christenson, CV Moore…
Clinical infectious diseases, 1995academic.oup.com
Pertussis is well controlled in the United States by routine childhood immunization. In
contrast, this disease is endemic and epidemic in Germany because routine immunization
has not been implemented. To gain information relating to the epidemiology of Bordetella
pertussis infections, we examined the prevalence and magnitude of B. pertussis agglutinins
and of IgG and IgA antibodies (detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) to four B.
pertussis antigens—lymphocytosis-promoting factor, filamentous hemagglutinin, pertactin …
Abstract
Pertussis is well controlled in the United States by routine childhood immunization. In contrast, this disease is endemic and epidemic in Germany because routine immunization has not been implemented. To gain information relating to the epidemiology of Bordetella pertussis infections, we examined the prevalence and magnitude of B. pertussis agglutinins and of IgG and IgA antibodies (detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) to four B. pertussis antigens— lymphocytosis-promoting factor, filamentous hemagglutinin, pertactin, and fimbriae-2—in the sera of 119 American university students and 119 German military recruits of similar age. Geometric mean titers of agglutinins and geometric mean values for IgG antibodies to the four antigens were two- to threefold higher in sera from the American students than in sera from German recruits. In contrast, the geometric mean IgA values and the percentage of subjects with detectable IgA antibodies to the four antigens were similar in the two populations. Since IgA antibody results mainly from infection and not from immunization, our data suggest that B. pertussis infections are common among both American and German young adults despite the marked difference in rates of clinical pertussis in the two countries.
Oxford University Press