As classic symptoms of whooping cough do not usually exist in adults, exposure to others with prolonged cough is used by some as an indicator of pertussis infection. Although less frequent in adults, post-tussive vomiting may also indicate pertussis. It is therefore important to remember B. pertussis when reviewing all adolescents and adults with a chronic cough.
A number of investigations can be performed to support the diagnosis of pertussis. These include:
- bacterial culture, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) or immunofluorescence assays of nasopharyngeal swab or aspirate samples
- serological testing to detect rises in immunoglobulin (Ig) A or IgG titres to B. pertussis antigens
- lymphocyte count (raised counts are a non-specific indicator of infection).
For patients presenting early (within the first three weeks) and before the start of antibiotic therapy, PCR, immunofluorescence and culture may be useful. For patients who present later, serological testing − which is reliant on an immune response − is often more helpful.3 Pertussis-specific IgA is only produced after natural infection, whereas IgG rises with vaccination and natural infection. While a positive IgA test confirms the diagnosis of pertussis, a negative result does not exclude the possibility of infection. (It is important to remember that a small proportion of the population has an IgA deficiency.) Paired samples showing rising titres of specific IgA or IgG are a more reliable indication that the patient has pertussis.
PCR-based testing is the most sensitive and specific of all investigations, particularly early in the illness. It is sensitive for longer than culture and is less likely to be affected by antibiotic treatment (0% detection via culture after seven days antibiotics).3 Although direct immunofluorescence is highly specific, it has limited sensitivity. Its main advantage is speed.