Background and epidemiology: Between Dec. 1, 2000, and Jan.11,
2001, 25 (28%) of 88 children at a daycare centre in NewHampshire
came down with chickenpox.1 Perhaps not a
surprisingfinding in the pre-vaccine era, but in this outbreak 73%
ofthe children old enough to receive the vaccine had been
vaccinated.The index case was a healthy 4-year-old boy who had been
vaccinated3 years previously. This outbreak raises new concerns over
theeffectiveness of the varicella vaccine and whether a boosterdose is needed.2
In the United States the varicella vaccine was approved in 1995by
the US Food and Drug Administration. By 2000 more than 75%of young
American children had been vaccinated and the incidenceof varicella
and varicella-related hospital admissions had declinedby 80%.3
The vaccine was licensed in Canada in 19984
and its use recommendedby the National Advisory Committee on
Immunization in 19995and the Canadian Task
Force on Preventive Health Care in 2001.6Data
for Canada are patchy; however, it is likely that the vaccineis not
widely used and that the incidence of varicella and related
complications requiring hospital admission remains unchanged(Dr.
Arlene King, Director, Immunization and Respiratory Diseases,Centre
for Infectious Disease Prevention and Control, HealthCanada:
personal communication, 2002). The vaccine, its useand
characteristics were reviewed in this column about a yearago.7
Single-dose vaccination is recommended for children 1215months
of age. The vaccine can be given simultaneously withthe
measlesmumpsrubella (MMR) vaccine at a separatesite. Catch-up
vaccination, again in a single dose, is recommendedfor susceptible
children (those who have not already had chickenpox)between 15
months and 12 years of age. For older susceptiblechildren and
adults, 2 doses 48 weeks apart are recommended.
Clinical management: The effectiveness of the varicella vaccineis
estimated to be between 70% and 90%.7 In the New
Hampshireoutbreak, it was 44%.
Reasons for vaccine failure can be primary or secondary. Primary
failure occurs when the vaccination does not seem to "take."The main
reasons for this are improper handling and storageof the vaccine.
Other factors related to primary failure ofthe varicella vaccine are
a history of asthma, lower age atvaccination, and simultaneous or
closely spaced varicella andMMR vaccine administration,2 although none of these was a riskfactor in
the New Hampshire outbreak. Higher doses of vaccinemay provide
better protection.7 Secondary failure is due towaning immunity with the passage of time.
Fourteen days is the typical incubation period for wild-virus
varicella infection; therefore, rashes that occur within 14days
after vaccination are almost always the result of infectionthat
occurred before vaccination. Between 14 and 42 days after
vaccination, the typical rash may be due to the wild virus orto the
vaccine virus; the distinction can be made only throughmolecular
typing. Cases of varicella that occur in vaccinatedpeople more than
42 days after vaccination are referred to as"breakthrough cases" and
are due to the wild virus.
Compared with naturally occurring varicella in nonvaccinated
people, breakthrough disease is milder and results in fewerlesions
(usually fewer than 50) and fewer complications.
Prevention and control: The implications of such a high degreeof
vaccine failure are 3-fold. First, although vaccinated children
experiencing breakthrough varicella will be less ill than nonvaccinatedchildren with naturally occurring chickenpox, they are still
capable of transmitting the wild virus and causing outbreaks,as was
the case in New Hampshire. One of the great benefitsof mass
vaccination is the virtual elimination of natural reservoirsof the
wild virus.
Second, it is believed that the vaccine virus is much less likely
than the wild virus to result in secondary infection (herpeszoster).2 Breakthrough disease presumably negates this benefitby exposing the vaccinated person to the wild virus and thus
increasing the chance that zoster will develop.
Finally, maternal infection with wild varicella zoster virus
during the first 28 weeks' gestation can result in transmissionof
the virus to the fetus and lead to congenital varicella syndrome.8Presumably, vaccinated women who experience
breakthrough diseasewould also expose their children to congenital
varicella syndrome.
Physicians and public health practitioners should continue their
current practices and follow the recommendations of expert groups.
However, these groups will need to rethink varicella vaccine
strategies. Also, surveillance of varicella infection shouldbe
heightened in both vaccinated and nonvaccinated populationsand
vaccine coverage rates monitored.
John HoeyCMAJ
References
Galil K, Lee B, Strine T, Carraher C, Baughman A, Eaton M,
et al. Outbreak of varicella at a day-care centre despite vaccination.
N Engl J Med 2002; 347:1909-15.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Gershon AA. Varicella vaccine Are two doses better than
one? [editorial] N Engl J Med 2002; 347: 1962-3.[Free Full Text]
Seward JF, Watson BM, Peterson CL, Mascola L, Pelosi JW,
Zhang JX, et al. Varicella disease after introduction of varicella vaccine
in the United States, 19952000. JAMA 2002;287:606-11.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
Law BJ. Chickenpox vaccination, not chickenpox, should be
routine for Canadian children [editorial]. CMAJ
2001;164(10):1454-5.[Free Full Text]
Varicella vaccination. Recommendation statement from the
Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care. CMAJ
2001;164(13):1888-9.[Free Full Text]
Wallington T, Weir E. Varicella control and vaccine
coverage: issues and challenges. CMAJ 2002; 166(5):631-2.[Free Full Text]
Mazzella M, Arioni C, Bellini C, Allegri AEM, Savioli C,
Serra G. Severe hydrocephalus associated with congenital varicella
syndrome. CMAJ 2003;168(5):561-3.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
This article has been cited by other articles:
Une politique
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OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR
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-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
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"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?"