4.6 Article

Epidemiology of pertussis-related paediatric intensive care unit (ICU) admissions in Australia, 1997-2013: an observational study

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 6, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010386

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian and New Zealand Intensive Care Society
  2. Ministry of Health (New Zealand)
  3. State and Territory Health Departments through Australian Health Ministers Advisory Council
  4. Sidney Myer Health Scholarship
  5. Queensland Children's Medical Research Institute
  6. University of Queensland School of Public Health
  7. University of Queensland Child Health Research Centre
  8. Australian Government National Health and Medical Research Council
  9. Queensland Children's Hospital Foundation

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Objective: To review the epidemiology of pertussis-related intensive care unit (ICU) admissions across Australia, over a 17-year period. Design: Retrospective descriptive study. Setting: Australian ICUs contributing data to the Australian and New Zealand Paediatric Intensive Care (ANZPIC) Registry. The number of contributing ICUs increased over the study period, from 8 specialist paediatric ICUs in 1997 to 8 specialist paediatric and 13 general ICUs in 2013. Participants: All paediatric (<16 years) ICU admissions, coded as pertussis-related, between 1 January 1997 and 31 December 2013. Results: A total of 373 pertussis-coded ICU admissions were identified in the ANZPIC Registry over the study period. Of these cases, 52.8% occurred during the 4 years of the recent Australian epidemic (2009-2012). ICU admissions were most likely to occur in infants aged younger than 6 weeks (41.8%, n=156) and aged 6 weeks to 4 months (42.9%, n=160). The median length of stay for pertussisrelated ICU admissions was 3.6 days, with 77.5% of cases staying in ICU for <7 days. Approximately half of all admissions (54.8%) required some form of respiratory support, with 32.7% requiring invasive respiratory support. Over the study period, 23 deaths were recorded (6.2% of pertussis-related ICU admissions), of which 20 (87.0%) were infants <4 months old. Conclusions: Pertussis-related ICU admissions occur primarily in infants too young to be fully protected from active immunisation. More needs to be done to protect these high-risk infants, such as maternal immunisation.

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