Vaccination
was one of the 20th century's most successful methods of disease prevention
and eradication. Smallpox was eradicated worldwide, and the Americas were
declared free of wild poliovirus in 1994.1 The reported incidence
of measles in the United States declined to 100 cases per year in 1999; more
than one half of these cases were due to the importation of measles from other
countries.2 In 1999, an outbreak of rubella occurred in Nebraska
among Hispanic meatpackers who had not received rubella vaccine in childhood.3
Because vaccine-preventable diseases continue to be imported from other
countries and are a threat to unimmunized persons in the United States, family
physicians and other health care workers should continue to maintain high
immunization rates in their patients.
Investigators in
several studies concluded that there is no causal relationship between
MMR vaccine and autism.
Unfortunately, maintaining high immunization rates is
becoming more difficult, in part because vaccines have become victims of their
own success. Diseases that are preventable by vaccination are no longer
encountered by most people in this country; thus, the threat of these
illnesses seems less real. In addition, vaccines are not 100 percent
effective, and they can have mild or, occasionally, serious adverse effects.
Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) established
the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) as a passive surveillance
system for clinical events that occur after immunization. VAERS reports are
submitted by manufacturers, health care professionals, state health
coordinators, and parents of vaccinated children.4
VAERS reports may be incomplete or inconsistent, and a
reported adverse event may be only temporally related to a vaccine.4
However, the effectiveness of VAERS as an early warning system was
demonstrated by reports of an increased incidence of intussusception after
immunization with rotavirus vaccine.5 This vaccine was subsequently
withdrawn from the market.
Public Perception and Tolerance of Vaccine Risks
A recent telephone survey6 demonstrated that
more than 80 percent of parents supported immunizing their children to keep
them well. However, 25 percent incorrectly believed that too many
immunizations could weaken their child's immune system. Respondents who were
women, white, or college graduates, or who had an alternative medical
orientation were more likely to opt out of immunization for their children.
More than 80 percent of respondents indicated that physicians were still their
primary source of vaccine information.
What level of vaccine-related risk will most parents
tolerate? A study7 in western Ontario found that most mothers would
accept a risk ranging from one adverse event per 100,000 to 1 million
vaccinations. However, 14 percent would not accept any risk of a serious
adverse event. This zero-risk tolerance group tended to have a lower income
and to prefer a nonnumeric statement of risk. Another study8 using
a hypothetic vaccine found that 23 percent of persons would vaccinate only if
the risk of a serious event was zero.
In the absence of a direct threat from disease, it is
clear that some people will not undergo vaccination unless absolute safety can
be assured. Although absolute vaccine safety is the optimal goal, it is
difficult to achieve in the real world.
Common Adverse Events with Vaccines
Common local reactions to vaccines include pain,
swelling, and redness at the injection site. Systemic reactions, including
fever, irritability, drowsiness, and rash, may also occur. The administration
of acetaminophen at the time of vaccination or shortly afterward may moderate
these effects.
Compared with the first dose, the fourth dose of
currently licensed diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis
vaccine (DTaP) has been associated with increased incidences of fever and
erythema, swelling, and pain at the injection site. In a small percentage of
children, swelling of the entire thigh or upper arm for about four days has
been reported after the fourth or fifth dose of DTaP. This self-limited
reaction has been documented for multiple products from different
manufacturers.9
One comparative study10 found no significant
differences in immunogenicity or reactions for a fifth-dose booster of six
DTaP vaccines and one U.S.-licensed diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and
whole-cell pertussis vaccine (DTwP). Redness, swelling, and pain at the
injection site were increased for the fifth-dose booster compared with the
fourth DTaP dose, but all common reactions occurred less frequently after DTaP
than after DTwP.
Traces of antibiotics such as neomycin, which is present
in varicella (chickenpox), trivalent inactivated poliovirus (IPV), and
measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccines, have been considered possible causes of
adverse reactions. A history of anaphylactic reaction to neomycin is a
contraindication to future immunization, whereas a local reaction is not.11(pp30-9)
Gelatin, which is used as a stabilizer in some live-virus
vaccines (e.g., varicella and MMR vaccines), might cause a reaction. Children
with a history of egg allergy may be given MMR vaccine, even though it is
derived from chick embryo fibroblast tissue culture. However, influenza
vaccine should not be given to a person with a history of egg allergy.11(p35)
MMR Vaccine and Autism
On November 12, 2000, the CBS television show
60 Minutes featured a story on the MMR vaccine and its
alleged link to autism. In 1998, investigators published a report12(pp637-41)
on 12 children referred to a London pediatric gastroenterology unit for the
evaluation of gastrointestinal diseases associated with developmental
regression. The parents of eight of these children associated the onset of
behavioral symptoms with the administration of MMR vaccine. The investigators
identified lymphoid nodular hyperplasia in 10 children and postulated that
"the consequences of an inflamed or dysfunctional intestine may play a part in
behavioural changes in some children."12(p639) However, behavioural
symptoms preceded bowel symptoms in four of the six children for whom the
onset of bowel symptoms was known. The investigators stated, "We did not prove
an association between measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine and the syndrome
described."12(p641)
In 1999, other investigators published the findings of a
much larger population-based study conducted in North London.13(pp2026-9)
The study identified 498 children with autism but found no temporal
association between onset of the disorder and receipt of MMR vaccine in the
previous one to two years. Cases of developmental regression were not
clustered in the months after vaccination. The investigators concluded, "Our
analyses do not support a causal association between MMR vaccine and autism.
If such an association occurs, it is so rare that it could not be identified
in this large regional sample."13(p2026)
Another set of investigators found no vaccine-associated
cases of inflammatory bowel disease or autism in 1.8 million Finnish children
who received almost 3 million doses of MMR vaccine over 14 years.14
In California, retrospective analyses15 of MMR immunization
coverage and children with autism also did not suggest an association between
MMR vaccine and an increased incidence of autism.
The Institute of Medicine (IOM) recently concluded that
"the evidence favors rejection of a causal relationship at the population
level between MMR vaccine and ASD (autistic spectrum disorders)."16(p9)
However, the IOM could "not exclude the possibility that MMR vaccine could
contribute to ASD in a small number of children."16(p9)
Data on measles, mumps, and rubella disease and MMR
vaccine11,14,17-23 are summarized in Table 1.24
TABLE 1 Measles, Mumps, and Rubella Disease and Vaccine Fact Sheet*
Disease factor/
risk of sequelae
Measles
Mumps
Rubella
MMR vaccine
Disease factor
Highest number of U.S. cases
894,134 cases in 194117
152,209 cases in 196818
12 million cases in 1964-1965;
57,686 cases in 196919
Congenital rubella: 20,000 cases in 1964-196519
Highly efficacious in preventing
disease
Recent number of
U.S. cases
86 cases in 200020
338 cases in 200020
176 cases in 200020
Congenital rubella: 9 cases in 200020
No cases of
congenital rubella reported after immunization of pregnant women,
but theoretic risk is 2%21
Transmission route
Droplets
Direct contact, airborne droplets,
fomites bysaliva
Transmission risk
in susceptible household contacts
90% in susceptible
household contacts17
Rate not
available, because 30% to 40% of infections are subclinical18
50% to 60% in
susceptible family members and almost 100% in closed populations19
Incidence of defects in congenital rubella: >=50% with infection
during first month of pregnancy; 20% to 30% with infection during
second month; 5% with infection during third or fourth month11(pp495-500)
--
Risk of sequelae
Mortality
1 to 2 deaths per 1,000 measles
cases11(pp385-96),17
2.5 to 50 deaths per 1 million mumps
cases, because of 1.4% to 2% fatality rate from encephalitis18,22
1 death per 30,000 rubella cases,
because of 20% fatality rate from encephalitis19
Congenital rubella: no data available
1 death, but not attributed to
vaccine14
Fatal measles pneumonitis in a 21-year-old man with advanced HIV
infection23
Encephalitis
1 to 2 cases per
1,000 measles cases17
1 case per 400 to
6,000 mumps cases22
1 case per 5,000
to 6,000 rubella cases19
1 case per 1
million doses14
Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
8.5 cases per 1 million measles
cases17
--
20 reported cases of progressive
rubella panencephalitis19
0 to 0.7 cases per 1 million doses14,17
Pneumonia
3% of young
adultswith measles23
--
--
2 cases per 1
million doses14
Thrombocytopenia
Rare22
1 case per 3,000 rubella cases19
0.5 to 33 cases per 1 milliondoses11(pp385-96),14
Orchitis
--
14% to 35% of
adolescent and adult men with mumps14,18
--
0.3 cases per 1
million doses14
Anaphylaxis
--
--
--
5 cases per 1 million doses (none
fatal)14
MMR = measles, mumps, rubella; HIV = human
immunodeficiency virus.
*--Data on measles, mumps, and rubella
disease represent reported or estimated disease and sequelae; data on
vaccine represent estimated risks.
--A single dose of vaccine given at 12
to 15 months of age has an efficacy of 95%; efficacy is further
improved by a second dose given at 4 to 6 years of age.11(pp385-96)
Thimerosal, a preservative containing ethyl mercury, has
been used to prevent bacterial and fungal contamination of vaccines since the
1930s. In 1999, the FDA determined that infants who received multiple
thimerosal-containing vaccines might be exposed to more mercury than is
recommended. As a result, initial hepatitis B immunization was deferred until
two to six months of age in infants of hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)negative
mothers.25 However, birth immunization continued to be recommended
for the infants of HBsAgpositive mothers and the infants of mothers whose
hepatitis B status was unknown.25 Unfortunately, some unimmunized
infants contracted hepatitis B, and at least one unimmunized infant born to an
HBsAgpositive mother died of fulminant hepatitis B.26 Routine
hospital immunization of newborns with currently available thimerosal-free
hepatitis B vaccines is now recommended.
Except for local hypersensitivity reactions, a recent
review27 found no evidence of harm from thimerosal in vaccines.
Thimerosal-free vaccines are now available for all routine childhood
immunizations. The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), American
Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), and Public Health Service (PHS) continue to
recommend the reduction or removal of thimerosal from vaccines and note
substantial progress in this effort.28
Vaccines and Multiple Sclerosis
Allegations have been raised that hepatitis B (HepB)
vaccine can cause chronic fatigue syndrome, multiple sclerosis, and other
autoimmune disorders.29 However, the National Multiple Sclerosis
Society30 cited a French report that found a lower frequency of
neurologic disease among recipients of 60 million doses of HepB vaccine. The
fact that genetic sequencing has not demonstrated a similarity between HepB
vaccine and myelin basic protein casts doubt on a theory proposing that
immunization provokes the formation of antimyelin antibodies (molecular
mimicry).31
A recent report32 from the Nurses' Health
Study, which included more than 200,000 women, found no association between
HepB vaccine and the development of multiple sclerosis. A study from the
European Database for Multiple Sclerosis33 found that vaccination
against tetanus, hepatitis B, and influenza did not increase the risk of
short-term relapse in patients with multiple sclerosis.
Vaccines and Type 1 Diabetes
Concerns have been expressed that vaccines could be
linked to type 1 diabetes. A Swedish study34 found that children
with type 1 diabetes were less likely to have received measles vaccine than
children without diabetes. No connection was reported between type 1 diabetes
and tetanus toxoid or pertussis, rubella, mumps, and bacille Calmette-Guérin
vaccines.34 A Vaccine Safety Datalink project of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) did not find an increased risk of type 1
diabetes with whole-cell or acellular pertussiscontaining vaccines, MMR
vaccine, HepB vaccine, and varicella vaccine.35 Similarly, there
has been no association between type 1 diabetes and Haemophilus
influenzae type b conjugate vaccine.36
Influenza Vaccine and Guillain-Barré Syndrome
The 1976 swine influenza vaccine was associated with an
increased risk of Guillain-Barré syndrome (slightly less than 10 cases per 1
million persons vaccinated) compared with the background risk.37
Later studies found either no statistically significant increase in risk or an
increase of about one additional case of Guillain-Barré syndrome per 1 million
persons vaccinated.37 This risk is significantly less than that for
severe influenza and its complications. However, influenza vaccine may be
avoided or antiviral chemoprophylaxis may be used in patients who are not at
high risk and who developed this syndrome within six weeks after receiving
influenza vaccine. Inactivated influenza vaccine contains noninfectious killed
viruses and cannot cause influenza.37
Varicella Vaccine and VAERS
The use of varicella vaccine is increasing in the United
States because of state mandates and reports of secondary infection with
invasive group A streptococcal disease in children with varicella-zoster virus
infection.38 Deaths from varicella pneumonia, encephalitis, and
disseminated disease have also occurred in adults exposed to children with
varicella.39
Significant risks of varicella disease and adverse events
attributed to varicella vaccine11,38,40-43 (many of them reported
from VAERS) are listed in Table 2.24 Although
events reported to VAERS may be temporally related to vaccination, this
relationship does not establish causation. Adverse events such as anaphylaxis
may be related to a sensitivity to vaccine components (e.g., gelatin) rather
than to the attenuated vaccine virus itself.
TABLE 2 Varicella Disease and Vaccine Fact Sheet*
Disease factor/risk of
sequelae
Varicella
Varicella vaccine
Disease
Average annual number of U.S. cases
3.7 million cases per year in
1980-199040
Efficacious in preventing disease
Transmission route
Direct contact or
airborne spread of respiratory tract secretions; transplacental
passage
Transmission rate to susceptible
contacts
90% in susceptible household
contacts40
<= 30% in classroom contacts41
3 confirmed cases secondary to
transmission in immunocompetent persons42
Risk of sequelae
Mortality
94 deaths per year
in 1987-199240
14 deaths in
1995-1998; vaccine not implicated or confirmed as cause42
Localized rash
3% to 5% of vaccine recipients11(pp624-38)
Generalized
varicella-like rash
100% of persons
with varicella
3% to 5% of
vaccine recipients11(pp624-38)
Invasive group A streptococcal
disease
5.2 cases per 100,000 varicella
cases38§
1 case42
Anaphylaxis
--
30 nonfatal cases42ý
Herpes zoster (children under 20
years of age)
68 cases per 100,000 person-years11(pp624-38)
2.6 cases per 100,000 doses11(pp624-38),42
Thrombocytopenia
1% to 2% of
persons with varicella41
0.3 cases per
100,000 doses42
Arthropathy
--
0.5 cases per 100,000 doses42
Cerebellar ataxia
1 case per 4,000
varicella cases43
0.4 cases per
100,000 doses41
Encephalitis
0.1% to 0.2% of persons with
varicella43
0.3 cases per 100,000 doses42
Pneumonia
1 case per 400
varicella cases in adults43
0.2 cases per
100,000 doses42
Congenital varicella syndrome
0.4% of infants zero to 12 weeks of
gestational age who have varicella11(pp624-38),40 2% of
infants 13 to 20 weeks of gestational age who have varicella11(pp624-38),40
No cases in 87 women who received
vaccine before or during pregnancy42
*--Data on varicella disease represent
reported or estimated disease and sequelae; data on varicella vaccine
represent estimated risks.
--The vaccine has an efficacy of 70% to
90%40; it is 95% to 100% effective in
preventing moderate to severe disease.11(pp624-38),42
--Based on reports to the Vaccine
Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) from March 17, 1995, through
July 25, 1998. Data from VAERS do not prove association of an adverse
event with a vaccine, but may prompt further investigation. The VAERS
reporting rate is the number of adverse events per estimated vaccine
doses sold.42
§--In children without varicella, the
incidence of invasive group A streptococcal disease is 0.09 cases per
100,000.
A recent study44 in Colorado demonstrated that
children who were exempted from immunization were 22 times more likely to
develop measles and almost six times more likely to acquire pertussis than
vaccinated children. School was the site of infection in more than 20 percent
of the children who developed measles or pertussis. In this study, each 1
percent increase in children exempted from immunization increased the risk of
a pertussis outbreak by 12 percent.44 Because immunizations against
measles and pertussis are not 100 percent effective, there was a 60 percent
and a 90 percent annual increased risk of measles and pertussis among
vaccinated children three to 18 years of age for each 1 percent increase in
the proportion of unimmunized children (exemptors) by county.44,45
One study found that
children who were exempted from immunization were 22 times more likely
to develop measles and almost six times more likely to develop
pertussis than vaccinated children.
Consequently, the choice of some parents not to immunize
their children increases the risk for children who are immunized. These
parents may not realize that the individual choice not to vaccinate a child
has public health consequences.
National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program
The National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986
established the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP) as a
federal no-fault system to compensate persons (or families of persons) who are
injured by covered childhood vaccines. This act also requires physicians and
other health care providers who administer VICP-covered vaccines or vaccines
purchased under CDC contract to record the date of administration, the vaccine
manufacturer, the lot number, and their name, business address, and title in
the patient's permanent medical record.46
Health care providers must also give the vaccine
recipient or the recipient's legal guardian the corresponding and most
up-to-date Vaccine Information Statement (VIS) each time a VICP-covered
vaccine is administered. The VIS for a nonVICP-covered vaccine must also be
given if the vaccine is purchased through a CDC contract. The CDC requires
that the VIS version date and the date the VIS is provided be documented in
the patient's medical record.46
The VIS for each vaccine may be obtained from the CDC (www.cdc.gov/nip/publications/vis/default.htm),
the state health department, or the Immunization Action Coalition (www.immunize.org/vis).
VIS translations in different languages are available on the Immunization
Action Coalition Web site.
Manufacturers, state health coordinators, health care
professionals, and parents may submit reports of adverse events following
immunization. The table of reportable events is available at
www.vaers.org/pdf/reportable.pdf. VAERS reporting forms can be obtained
from the VAERS Web site (www.vaers.org) or
by telephone (800-822-7967). A written form is available at the end of the
Physicians' Desk Reference. Definitions of possibly
compensable injuries and further information regarding eligibility and
documentation of claims may be obtained from the VICP (www.hrsa.gov/bhpr/vicp)
or by telephone (800-338-2382).
The author indicates that he does not have any conflicts of
interest. Sources of funding: Work on the manuscript was supported by funding
from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Immunization
Program, through Cooperative Agreement U66/CCU719217-01 to the Society of
Teachers of Family Medicine Foundation. Dr. Kimmel is a member of the
speaker's bureau (immunizations) for GlaxoSmithKline and serves on the Adult
Vaccine Advisory Board for Merck & Co., Inc.
The Author
SANFORD R. KIMMEL, M.D., is professor of clinical family
medicine at the Medical College of Ohio, Toledo. After graduating from Ohio
State University College of Medicine, Columbus, he completed a family practice
residency at St. Elizabeth Medical Center, Dayton, Ohio, and pediatric
training at Children's Hospital, Columbus, Ohio. Dr. Kimmel is the author of
multiple articles on immunizations and book chapters on various pediatric
topics. Previously, he chaired the Group on Immunization Education of the
Society of Teachers of Family Medicine.
Address correspondence to Sanford R. Kimmel, M.D.,
Department of Family Medicine, Medical College of Ohio, 1015 Garden Lake
Pkwy., Toledo, OH 43614 (e-mail:
skimmel@mco.edu). Reprints are not available from the author.
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personal exemptions to immunization. JAMA 2000; 284:3145-50.
Edwards KM. State mandates and childhood immunization. JAMA
2000;284:3171-3.
Evans G. Pediatricians must use official Vaccine Information Statements.
AAP News April 2000;16:14.
ALL INFORMATION, DATA, AND
MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR GENERAL INFORMATION
PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS
OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR
LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND
COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH
YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"