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April 2003 CHICAGO The lessons learned in
vaccinating the nations children were applied to preparing the
country for a bioterrorism attack, according to Walter Orenstein,
MD, the director of the National Immunization Program.
The foundation built to educate and encourage childhood
immunization was used to guide CDC, state and community preparedness
efforts, especially with respect to the presidents recommendations
for the use of smallpox vaccine, Orenstein said here at the
National Immunization Conference.
The smallpox vaccination program was the first intensive,
national, occupational adult immunization program, he explained.
Recommendations to produce a smallpox vaccine were developed and
refined, training and education was undertaken, and vaccine safety
systems were implemented. Smallpox vaccination programs are here to
stay, Orenstein warned the public health officials who attended the
conference.
He called the process disruptive to the normal public health
routine, but added that the public health system cannot lose sight
of what we have accomplished against natural threats, the diseases
that we have made so much progress in reducing, and in many cases
eliminating in the United States.
And there are many successes.
With the exception of pertussis, we have reduced all of them
[childhood vaccine preventable diseases] by 98% or more and the vast
majority by 99%, Orenstein said, adding, This is a remarkable
accomplishment.
In 1990, there were 28,000 cases of measles in the United States;
last year, there were 37. Mumps went down from 4,866 cases in 1988
to 238 in 2002, and rubella went from 225 cases to 14 in the same
interval. When I first saw this, I thought my staff had made a
mistake, I said, please give me the right number it is the right
number, he joked.
Although varicella vaccine coverage is only 76%, the vaccine has
still produced remarkable results. I think one of the most
rewarding achievements is the decrease in varicella deaths,
particularly in individuals younger than 20 years of age, where the
major focus of immunization is; to a lesser extent in 20- to
49-year-olds, probably as a result of herd immunity being induced by
vaccination, and to the least extent, persons 50 and above; but
nevertheless an apparent reduction. Our 2010 goal is 90% reduction
in cases, he said.
Weve made major progress in improving coverage for a number of
immunizations. Hepatitis B vaccine [HepB] coverage for 2-year-old
children in 1993 was 16%; in 2001 we were approaching 90%. For most
vaccines we are either at or approaching 90% immunization coverage
for 19- to 35-month-old children (median age 27 months).
The only disease going in the wrong direction is pertussis and
that in large part is because we have a reservoir of pertussis
transmission in adolescents and young adults. And we need a
technological fix, a way of immunizing those populations, which we
cannot do at this point, he explained. Pertussis cases have
actually increased from 3,450 in 1988 to 8,296 cases in 2002.
While most disease numbers are down, the number of diseases that
children are protected against has increased. In 1988, children were
vaccinated against measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria, tetanus,
pertussis and polio, and toddlers were vaccinated against
Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib). Today, children are
vaccinated against those diseases, but also hepatitis B, varicella
and Streptococcus pneumoniae. Infants are now vaccinated
against Hib. Some areas also vaccinate children against hepatitis A.
We now vaccinate children routinely against 11 vaccine
preventable diseases, many more than when we were children and when
todays parents were children, Orenstein explained.
While this is a remarkable achievement, it is also a challenge to
every physician because of the number of injections children must
receive by 18 months of age to be fully vaccinated.
The recent licensure of Pediarix should help, Orenstein said.
Prior to the licensure of Pediarix, it took 16 to 20 injections by
18 months of age to fully immunize a child, and an additional four
injections by 18 years of age to complete the immunization series
for the 11 diseases. Lets look at a few office visits, now that we
have Pediarix, which is a combined DTaP-HepB-IPV. At the two-month
visit to vaccinate against seven diseases, including pneumococcal
disease, Hib, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, polio and hepatitis B,
it took four to five injections depending on which combinations you
used. With Pediarix you can do it in three. By 18 months, excluding
the birth dose of HepB, it took 16 to 20 before. It now can be done
in 13 to 14. And by 18 years of age, you can get by with as few as
17 injections, whereas before, it took as many as 24. This is a
significant breakthrough, Orenstein said. But it still is not a
panacea. We need more. We still have, even with Pediarix, 17 to 21
injections by 18 years of age. Its too many, and we need more
combinations, but this is a step in the right direction.
![[bar]](/sites/default/files/DailyNews/2003/May/06/gradient.gif)
Vaccine progress
Although HepA is not universally required, the vaccine has still
led to a decrease in cases. Prior to vaccine licensure in 1995, on
average there were about 12 per 100,000 cases per year with some
cycles in the United States. There has been a two-thirds reduction
in hepatitis A (HAV) cases since the vaccine was licensed, he
explained.
Internationally, there has also been progress on the vaccine
front, especially against measles and polio. Measles is the
greatest vaccine-preventable killer of children even today. In 1990,
the World Health Organization (WHO) estimated that over 1.6 million
children had died. We are now down to under 800,000 deaths, but we
still have a long way to go.
Polio elimination is also on target. In 1988 when the World
Health Assembly endorsed global eradication, polio existed on every
continent except Australia and Antarctica. About 125 countries were
endemic, and there were about 350,000 cases a year. Today, seven
countries report about 1,900 cases.
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Vaccine Preventable Disease Incidence
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Disease
Measles
Rubella
Mumps
Diphtheria
Tetanus
Pertussis
Polio |
1988
3,396
225
4,866
2
53
3,450
9 |
1993
312
192
1,692
0
48
6,586
3 |
2002*
37
14
238
1
22
8,296
0 |

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* Provisional data |
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Source: CDC |
But there are challenges ahead for anyone who vaccinates people,
Orenstein said. Securing stable and efficient vaccine financing;
avoiding delays and shortages; assuring and maintaining vaccine
safety; and fostering and achieving adult immunization. Adult
immunization is important not just because it is a good thing to do,
but because pandemic influenza is the ultimate bio-terrifying virus,
it is a virus which bioengineers itself, creating large populations
of susceptible people. We will see pandemic flu at some point, and
we need to have an adult influenza infrastructure that can handle
it. Finally, we have to manage smallpox-related demands. They are
not going away, and we need to build our preparedness, he said.
Vaccine development and vaccine production costs have increased
dramatically, and physicians should expect higher costs as new
vaccines are brought to market. The days of the very cheap vaccines
are over, Orenstein said.
We have asked the IOM to look at what the vaccine financing
system should be in the U.S., and we anticipate their report
sometime this summer. In the meantime, the administration has
proposed some improvements for the Vaccines for Children (VFC)
program, which, while not solving everything, will help in trying to
establish a firm financial base.
The administration has proposed three initiatives to Congress:
improving vaccine access to underinsured children; removing vaccine
price caps from public-sector vaccine purchases; and building a six
month national stockpile of childhood vaccines by 2006 using VFC
funds.
A major guiding principle of these proposals is not to change
the public-private market share. Manufacturers have expressed
extreme concern that they do not want a bigger public market; it
decreases their ability to control their destinies.
Above all, Orenstein said, vaccine safety is a special
obligation. We need an infrastructure to maintain parent and public
confidence. It starts with our Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting
System, where we hear about reports and it triggers investigations.
It is important for physicians who suspect an adverse event to
report it to VAERS.
Another challenge in the coming years will be fostering adult
immunization. We now realize with diseases like influenza we had
been underestimating its health impact. Thirty-six thousand or more
people die in an average influenza epidemic, and about 6,000 to
7,000 die annually from pneumococcal disease, about half of them in
the elderly. We need to improve our efforts. And we are far short of
our 90% goal, Orenstein said.
The Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services will now reimburse
standing orders programs, which may help improve rates in hospitals,
long-term care facilities, home-health care settings and other
places where there have been substantial missed opportunities for
vaccination.
In addition, the 2003 Medicare fee schedule almost doubles the
vaccine administration fee for Medicare patients. The national
average goes from $3.98 to $7.72, depending on the area.
For more information:
- Orenstein W. 2003 NIP Program Review. Presented at
the 2003 National Immunization Conference: Building a
Strong Foundation for Todays Challenges. March 17-20,
2003. Chicago.
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