|
FDA OKs new childhood vaccine
combination
WASHINGTON (APOnline) — Parents, expect fewer screams
in the pediatrician's office: A new vaccine that promises to cut out six of
the 20 injections that babies get before age 2 won federal approval Monday.
The vaccine, called Pediarix, combines into one
injection today's shots that protect against five different diseases —
diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, hepatitis B and polio.
Until now, it has taken nine separate injections for
babies to get that much protection. Pediarix requires only three shots
staggered through the first six months of life.
Pediarix won Food and Drug Administration approval
after studies involving thousands of babies proved it was as effective as
the nine separate shots. The combination vaccine will begin selling early
next month, and cost about the same as the separate injections added
together, said manufacturer GlaxoSmithKline.
Pediarix doesn't cover everything: Babies still will
need separate shots to protect against two types of meningitis and
pneumonia. After their first birthday, they start getting shots against
other diseases, such as measles and chickenpox.
In 1980, babies were immunized against just four
diseases. Today, by age 2 most children have had up to 20 shots to protect
against 11 diseases. That mean more and more protection against deadly
illnesses — and it also means more crying.
For parents, eliminating the need for six of the
shots is good news.
Take Yehoshua Halle, who at age 6 months got a
whopping six shots — the usual four immunization injections in addition to
shots for the flu and another dangerous respiratory infection, needed
because he was born premature.
"Even the nurse was amazed she had to administer six
shots at one time," said his mother, Tamara Halle of Silver Spring, Md.,
recalling that October visit. "He did well, he did a fantastic job, but it's
a lot for a little person to have to handle."
Fewer shots per visit doesn't eliminate the fact that
babies still will cry through some injections at ages 2, 4 and 6 months,
noted Mimi Laver, a Washington mother who remembered her now 17-month-old's
inoculations as not being too bad.
"It's sad to see him crying. Once he was crying, the
extra shot didn't really matter," she said. Her son, Noah Freedman, would
calm down after a few minutes, leading her to conclude that while fewer
shots are nice, "it doesn't rank high on my priorities for child health."
Decreased pain isn't the only reason for combination
vaccines, said Dr. Mark M. Blatter of Primary Physicians Research in
Pittsburgh, one of the Glaxo-funded study sites for Pediarix.
Scientists are working to create vaccines against
more and more diseases, and without combining shots there simply won't be
room on babies' tiny thighs for more inoculations, he said.
Vaccine makers have long tried to combine
inoculations. Already there are three-in-one shots for diphtheria, tetanus
and whooping cough, commonly abbreviated as DTaP, and measles, mumps and
rubella, or MMR. Also, there is a combination shot that combines protection
against hepatitis B and meningitis-causing Haemophilus influenza B.
Adults commonly get a diptheria-tetanus combination
shot, and each year's flu shot contains protection against three strains of
influenza.
But with five-in-one protection, Pediarix becomes the
biggest combination vaccine yet.
In studies, side effects were similar in babies who
got Pediarix and those who got separate shots, the FDA said. There was one
exception: Pediarix patients were slightly more likely to have a low fever,
in one study 19% of them compared with 12% of babies getting the separate
shots, Blatter said.
As for babies' fussing on vaccination day, "I've
always had the impression, 'What's a minute or two more of crying?'" said
Blatter — until he compared administering Pediarix to separate shots and
concluded babies cry for more than a few minutes while the doctor prepares
each injection. "We're going to decrease the amount of craziness that goes
on in the typical pediatrician's office."
Copyright 2002 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|