Monday, March 30, 2026

Meta-Analysis IDs Top 5 Factors for Severe Pertussis in Chinese Children, Including Lung Consolidation (OR 15.44)

Key Takeaway
Monitor for lung consolidation, three concave sign, and elevated CRP in pediatric pertussis cases to identify severe disease risk.

A meta-analysis systematically evaluated factors influencing severe pertussis in Chinese children to provide scientific evidence for prevention and treatment. The study conducted a comprehensive literature search of PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, CNKI, and Wanfang databases for relevant studies published up to September 30, 2025. A total of 24 studies were included, comprising 839 severe pertussis cases and 4,280 non-severe cases. Data were combined using fixed or random effects models. The analysis found severe pertussis was significantly associated with several factors. The top five strongest associations, in order, were: lung consolidation or atelectasis (odds ratio [OR]: 15.44; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 9.06-26.31), three concave sign (OR: 12.91; 95%CI: 5.46-30.53), elevated C-reactive protein (OR: 5.33; 95%CI: 3.00-9.49), being unvaccinated with the DTP vaccine (OR: 4.00; 95%CI: 2.86-5.58), and white blood cell count (weighted mean difference [WMD]: 16.42 × 10⁹/L; 95%CI: 9.49-23.36). The abstract concludes that early identification of these factors and timely intervention, along with strengthening vaccination efforts for children, can help effectively reduce severe cases. The abstract does not report specific study designs of the included literature, detailed patient demographics, safety signals, or limitations of the meta-analysis itself.

View Original Abstract ↓
This study systematically evaluates factors influencing severe pertussis in Chinese children, providing scientific evidence for its prevention and treatment. A comprehensive search of PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, CNKI, and Wanfang identified literature on factors influencing severe pertussis in Chinese children up to September 30, 2025. We conducted a meta-analysis, and data were combined using either fixed or random models. A total of 24 studies included 839 severe pertussis cases and 4,280 non-severe cases. Severe pertussis was significantly associated with several factors, with the top five strongest associations being: lung consolidation or atelectasis (OR: 15.44; 95%CI: 9.06-26.31), three concave sign (OR: 12.91; 95%CI: 5.46-30.53), elevated C-reactive protein (OR: 5.33; 95%CI: 3.00-9.49), unvaccinated with DTP vaccine (OR: 4.00; 95%CI: 2.86-5.58), and white blood cell count (WMD: 16.42 × 10/L; 95%CI: 9.49-23.36). Early identification of these factors and timely intervention, along with strengthening vaccination efforts for children, can help effectively reduce severe cases.