Researchers say they believe the vaccine, Prevnar, reduced the rate
of blood infections and meningitis in children under 2 by nearly 70
percent."The vaccine is working. It is not only preventing
diseases in high-risk children but also in their families," said Dr.
Cynthia Whitney, who led the study for the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
How many infants have been immunized isn't known yet, but the
vaccine has been widely adopted.
The findings appear in Thursday's New England Journal of
Medicine, along with a three-year study of an older pneumonia
vaccine recommended for everyone over 65. In that study of 47,365
people, the vaccine cut the risk of serious blood infections almost
in half, but offered no protection against pneumonia, reflecting
some previous research in the elderly.
"There's a benefit of the vaccine. It's just the benefit doesn't
extend to prevention of pneumonia from what we can tell," said Dr.
Lisa A. Jackson, who led the CDC-funded research at the Group Health
Cooperative, an HMO based in Seattle.
Pneumococcus bacteria is carried in the nose and throat of
healthy people, and is spread from person to person. The very young
and the elderly are most vulnerable, as well as people with medical
conditions that weaken their immune system and their ability to
fight the bug.
Until 2000, pneumococcal infections resulted in up to 135,000
annual hospitalizations for pneumonia and 60,000 cases of blood
infections, including 3,300 cases of meningitis, according to the
CDC.
Those numbers are changing because of the new infant vaccine. The
CDC study examined the vaccine's impact by tracking the more serious
pneumococcal infections blood poisonings and meningitis in seven
areas of the country covering 16 million people.
"It's real life. It's not a controlled study," said Whitney.
"Given the price of the vaccine, I think it's really important that
we figure out what's going on with this. Are we getting our money's
worth?" Each of the four doses costs $61, according to the vaccine
maker Wyeth.
From 1998 to 2001, the findings show, the rate of blood
infections and meningitis dropped by 69 percent in children under 2
from 188 cases to 59 cases per 100,000. The rate fell 44 percent for
2-year-olds but there was no change for older children.
There was evidence that less bacteria was passed from children to
adults. The disease rate dropped as much as 32 percent in adults 20
to 39.
The research also indicates that the infant vaccine can prevent
infections by drug-resistant strains of bacteria. In 2001, 35
percent fewer infections were caused by strains resistant to
penicillin.
"These are very important findings and if they can be confirmed
more broadly and more directly ... that's really powerful stuff,"
said Dr. Greg Poland, director of the Mayo Clinic Vaccine Research
Group, who was not involved in the studies.
He said doctors need to explain to elderly patients that, despite
its name, the vaccine used in adults might not protect them against
pneumonia but does prevent more lethal complications.
"That alone is enough," he said.
Jackson said a different vaccine is probably needed for the
elderly, and one possibility is the infant's vaccine. It protects
against seven types of pneumococcal bacteria but works differently
than the older vaccine, which is designed to guard against 23 types.
The medical director of adult vaccines for Merck & Co., which
makes the Pneumovax 23 vaccine, said it targets the most common but
not all the strains that cause pneumonia. Nor does it guard against
other causes of pneumonia which were included in the study, said Dr.
Joan Benson. The vaccine costs about $16.
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