Abstract
Background/Objectives: Following the COVID-19 pandemic, pertussis resurged sharply across Europe, with 209,674 cases reported in the EU/EEA in 2024. This study characterises the epidemiology of the 2024 pertussis resurgence across five counties of southeastern Romania, with emphasis on vaccination status, clinical severity, and regional surveillance performance. Methods: A retrospective, population-based analysis was conducted on 452 cases notified between February 2024 and January 2025, extracted from the national surveillance database. A pre-specified reclassification of PCR-positive cases yielded 326 confirmed cases. Categorical, non-parametric, correlation, and multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed. Results: The epidemic peaked in September 2024, with 56.0% of cases occurring between August and October. Children under five years accounted for 63.2% of confirmed cases, and 72.1% were not vaccinated according to age-appropriate schedule, predominantly due to parental refusal (43.0%) and non-attendance (36.6%). Pneumonia affected 36.8% of confirmed cases, ranging from 81.0% in infants under two months to 0% in adolescents. Age-appropriate vaccination was independently protective against pneumonia (adjusted OR = 0.53, 95% CI 0.29 to 0.96, p = 0.035; population attributable risk 37.3%). Significant inter-county heterogeneity was identified in PCR implementation (72 to 100%) and reporting delays. Conclusions: Vaccination gaps were the principal modifiable driver of the resurgence, supporting targeted coverage improvement and the introduction of a national maternal Tdap programme.
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