IMMUNAX REPORT
Sacramento,
California
Lenny Schafer schafer@feat.org
Editor
January 25, 2001
http://www.healthmall.com/newsletter.cfm
According to an article in the January 10, 2001, issue of
the Journal of the American Medical Association, there is no evidence mass
immunization is effective for controlling outbreaks or epidemics of serogroup C
meningococcal disease protection in young children.
Philippe De Wals, PhD, of Sherbrooke University Hospital
Center, Sherbrooke, Quebec, and colleagues studied the impact of a mass
immunization campaign and assessed the vaccine effectiveness (VE) of serogroup
C polysaccharide vaccine in controlling outbreaks of meningococcal disease (MCD).
The authors analyzed MCD cases reported in Quebec from 1990 to 1998, before and
after the mass immunization campaign was conducted during the winter of
1992-1993.
The target population of the campaign was individuals aged
six months to 20 years, and 84% were vaccinated.
The mass immunization campaign was a response to an
outbreak of MCD in Quebec province in the late 1980s. In an attempt to control
this outbreak, local immunization programs directed at school-aged children and
adolescents were initiated in late 1991 and extended in 1992. By the autumn of
that year, approximately 300,000 doses of polysaccharide vaccine had been administered,
but the incidence of serogroup C MCD continued to stay high in the groups that
were not vaccinated, and clusters appeared in previously unaffected areas.
As a result, local authorities decided to conduct a mass
immunization program and to offer the vaccine free to all 1.9 million people
living in the province between the ages of six months and 20 years. The
campaign started in December 1992 and was completed by the end of March 1993. Approximately 1.6 million doses of vaccine
were distributed. During the period from January 1, 1990, through December 31,
1998, a total of 899 MCD cases were registered.
The study found that vaccine effectiveness was strongly
related to the age of the individual at the time of vaccination, for children
aged two to nine years, VE was 41%.
“There was no evidence of protection in children younger
than two years; all eight MCD cases in this age group occurred in vaccines,” De
Wals et al. reported. “Ultimately, cost-effectiveness should be the criterion
for deciding which of the polysaccharide or conjugate vaccines should be recommended
for different age groups. Results of randomized trials and epidemiological
studies on conjugate vaccines are urgently needed for comparison purposes.
“Serogroup C polysaccharide vaccine is effective for
controlling outbreaks in teenaged individuals but should not be used in
children young than two years,” De Wals’ group concluded.
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