May 1, 2003 2:20 pm US/Central WASHINGTON(AP)A new pneumonia vaccine for infants guards
against serious illness in children and may have the added benefit
of preventing them from spreading the bacteria to adults, a study
finds.
The vaccine, Prevnar, targets infections caused by pneumococcus
bacteria, including pneumonia, blood poisoning, meningitis and ear
infections. Approved in 2000, it is the only pneumonia vaccine for
infants and toddlers and is recommended for all children under 2.
During its first full year in use, the rate of blood infections and
meningitis dropped by nearly 70 percent in children under 2, the
researchers reported. There were also declines in those diseases in
unvaccinated adults.
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.
The findings appear in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine. A
second study in the journal looked at another pneumonia vaccine,
which is recommended for those over 65. In that three-year study of
47,365 people, the vaccine cut the risk of serious blood infections
almost in half, but didn't prevent pneumonia in the elderly.
The researchers said that vaccine is beneficial for its protection
against blood infections.
It's a very safe vaccine. It's not very expensive, and in general,
people only need to get it one time. It's worth getting, 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 the infant vaccine was introduced, there were 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.
To measure the vaccine's impact, the CDC study tracked blood
poisonings and meningitis in seven parts of the country. How many
babies have been immunized isn't known yet, but the vaccine has been
widely adopted. Four doses are needed at $61 each, according to the
vaccine maker Wyeth Pharmaceuticals.
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.
The vaccine had previously been shown to be effective in controlled
studies.
It's nice to see in real life it's the same, said Whitney.
In adults, the disease rate dropped as much as 32 percent in those
20 to 39, suggesting that there was less transmission between
children and adults, the researchers said.
There were also 35 percent fewer infections 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 the vaccine
used in adults might not protect them against pneumonia but does
prevent more lethal diseases.
Jackson said a different vaccine may be 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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"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
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