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General Recommendations on
Immunization
Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices (ACIP) and the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP)
Prepared by
William L. Atkinson, M.D.1
Larry K. Pickering, M.D.2
Benjamin Schwartz, M.D.3
Bruce G. Weniger, M.D.3
John K. Iskander, M.D.3
John C. Watson, M.D.4
1Immunization Services Division
2Office of the Director
3Epidemiology and Surveillance Division
National Immunization Program
4Division of Parasitic Diseases
National Center for Infectious Diseases
The material in this report was prepared for publication by the
National Immunization Program, Walter A. Orenstein, M.D., Director; and the
Immunization Services Division, Lance E. Rodewald, M.D., Director.
Summary
This report is a revision of General Recommendations on Immunization and
updates the 1994 statement by the Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices (ACIP) (CDC. General recommendations on immunization:
recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices [ACIP].
MMWR 1994;43[No. RR-1]:1--38). The principal changes include expansion of
the discussion of vaccination spacing and timing, recommendations for
vaccinations administered by an incorrect route, information regarding
needle-free injection technology, vaccination of children adopted from
countries outside the United States, timing of live-virus vaccination and
tuberculosis screening, expansion of the discussion and tables of
contraindications and precautions regarding vaccinations, and addition of a
directory of immunization resources. These recommendations are not
comprehensive for each vaccine. The most recent ACIP recommendations for
each specific vaccine should be consulted for additional details. This
report, ACIP recommendations for each vaccine, and other information
regarding immunization can be accessed at CDC's National Immunization
Program website at http://www.cdc.gov/nip
(accessed October 11, 2001).
Introduction
This report provides technical guidance regarding common immunization
concerns for health-care providers who administer vaccines to children,
adolescents, and adults. Vaccine recommendations are based on
characteristics of the immunobiologic product, scientific knowledge
regarding the principles of active and passive immunization, the
epidemiology and burden of diseases (i.e., morbidity, mortality, costs of
treatment, and loss of productivity), the safety of vaccines, and the cost
analysis of preventive measures as judged by public health officials and
specialists in clinical and preventive medicine.
Benefits and risks are associated with using all immunobiologics. No
vaccine is completely safe or 100% effective. Benefits of vaccination
include partial or complete protection against the consequences of infection
for the vaccinated person, as well as overall benefits to society as a
whole. Benefits include protection
from symptomatic illness, improved quality of life and productivity,
and prevention of death. Societal benefits include creation and maintenance
of herd immunity against communicable diseases, prevention of disease
outbreaks, and reduction in health-care--related costs. Vaccination risks
range from common, minor, and local adverse effects to rare, severe, and
life-threatening conditions. Thus, recommendations for immunization
practices balance scientific evidence of benefits for each person and to
society against the potential costs and risks of vaccination programs.
Standards for child and adolescent immunization practices and standards
for adult immunization practices (1,2)
have been published to assist with implementing vaccination programs and
maximizing their benefits. Any person or institution that provides
vaccination services should adopt these standards to improve immunization
delivery and protect children, adolescents, and adults from
vaccine-preventable diseases.
To maximize the benefits of vaccination, this report provides general
information regarding immunobiologics and provides practical guidelines
concerning vaccine administration and technique. To minimize risk from
vaccine administration, this report delineates situations that warrant
precautions or contraindications to using a vaccine. These recommendations
are intended for use in the United States because vaccine availability and
use, as well as epidemiologic circumstances, differ in other countries.
Individual circumstances might warrant deviations from these
recommendations. The relative balance of benefits and risks can change as
diseases are controlled or eradicated. For example, because wild poliovirus
transmission has been interrupted in the United States since 1979, the only
indigenous cases of paralytic poliomyelitis reported since that time have
been caused by live oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV). In 1997, to reduce the
risk for vaccine-associated paralytic polio (VAPP), increased use of
inactivated poliovirus vaccine (IPV) was recommended in the United States (3).
In 1999, to eliminate the risk for VAPP, exclusive use of IPV was
recommended for routine vaccination in the United States (4),
and OPV subsequently became unavailable for routine use. However, because of
superior ability to induce intestinal immunity and to prevent spread among
close contacts, OPV remains the vaccine of choice for areas where wild
poliovirus is still present. Until worldwide eradication of poliovirus is
accomplished, continued vaccination of the U.S. population against
poliovirus will be necessary.
Timing and Spacing of
Immunobiologics
General Principles for Vaccine Scheduling
Optimal response to a vaccine depends on multiple factors, including the
nature of the vaccine and the age and immune status of the recipient.
Recommendations for the age at which vaccines are administered are
influenced by age-specific risks for disease, age-specific risks for
complications, ability of persons of a certain age to respond to the
vaccine, and potential interference with the immune response by passively
transferred maternal antibody. Vaccines are recommended for members of the
youngest age group at risk for experiencing the disease for whom efficacy
and safety have been demonstrated.
Certain products, including inactivated vaccines, toxoids, recombinant
subunit and polysaccharide conjugate vaccines, require administering >2
doses for development of an adequate and persisting antibody response.
Tetanus and diphtheria toxoids require periodic reinforcement or booster
doses to maintain protective antibody concentrations. Unconjugated
polysaccharide vaccines do not induce T-cell memory, and booster doses are
not expected to produce substantially increased protection. Conjugation with
a protein carrier improves the effectiveness of polysaccharide vaccines by
inducing T-cell--dependent immunologic function. Vaccines that stimulate
both cell-mediated immunity and neutralizing antibodies (e.g., live
attenuated virus vaccines) usually can induce prolonged, often lifelong
immunity, even if antibody titers decline as time progresses (5).
Subsequent exposure to infection usually does not lead to viremia but to a
rapid anamnestic antibody response.
Approximately 90%--95% of recipients of a single dose of a parenterally
administered live vaccine at the recommended age (i.e., measles, mumps,
rubella [MMR], varicella, and yellow fever), develop protective antibody
within 2 weeks of the dose. However, because a limited proportion of
recipients (<5%) of MMR vaccine fail to respond to one dose, a second
dose is recommended to provide another opportunity to develop immunity (6).
The majority of persons who fail to respond to the first dose of MMR respond
to a second dose (7). Similarly, approximately 20% of persons aged
>13 years fail to respond to the first dose of varicella vaccine; 99% of
recipients seroconvert after two doses (8).
The recommended childhood vaccination schedule is revised annually and is
published each January. Recommendations for vaccination of adolescents and
adults are revised less frequently, except for influenza vaccine
recommendations, which are published annually. Physicians and other
health-care providers should always ensure that they are following the most
up-to-date schedules, which are available from CDC's National Immunization
Program website at http://www.cdc.gov/nip
(accessed October 11, 2001).
Spacing of Multiple Doses of the Same Antigen
Vaccination providers are encouraged to adhere as closely as possible to
the recommended childhood immunization schedule. Clinical studies have
reported that recommended ages and intervals between doses of multidose
antigens provide optimal protection or have the best evidence of efficacy.
Recommended vaccines and recommended intervals between doses are provided in
this report (Table 1).
In certain circumstances, administering doses of a multidose vaccine at
shorter than the recommended intervals might be necessary. This can occur
when a person is behind schedule and needs to be brought up-to-date as
quickly as possible or when international travel is impending. In these
situations, an accelerated schedule can be used that uses intervals between
doses shorter than those recommended for routine vaccination. Although the
effectiveness of all accelerated schedules has not been evaluated in
clinical trials, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP)
believes that the immune response when accelerated intervals are used is
acceptable and will lead to adequate protection. The accelerated, or
minimum, intervals and ages that can be used for scheduling catch-up
vaccinations is provided in this report (Table 1).
Vaccine doses should not be administered at intervals less than these
minimum intervals or earlier than the minimum age.*
In clinical practice, vaccine doses occasionally are administered at
intervals less than the minimum interval or at ages younger than the minimum
age. Doses administered too close together or at too young an age can lead
to a suboptimal immune response. However, administering a dose a limited
number of days earlier than the minimum interval or age is unlikely to have
a substantially negative effect on the immune response to that dose.
Therefore, ACIP recommends that vaccine doses administered <4 days
before the minimum interval or age be counted as valid. However,
because of its unique schedule, this recommendation does not apply to rabies
vaccine (9).
Doses administered >5 days earlier than the minimum interval or age
should not be counted as valid doses and should be repeated as
age-appropriate. The repeat dose should be spaced after the invalid dose by
the recommended minimum interval as provided in this report (Table
1). For example, if Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) doses one
and two were administered only 2 weeks apart, dose two is invalid and should
be repeated. The repeat dose should be administered >4 weeks after
the invalid (second) dose. The repeat dose would be counted as the second
valid dose. Doses administered >5 days before the minimum age should
be repeated on or after the child reaches the minimum age and >4
weeks after the invalid dose. For example, if varicella vaccine were
administered at age 10 months, the repeat dose would be administered no
earlier than the child's first birthday.
Certain vaccines produce increased rates of local or systemic reactions
in certain recipients when administered too frequently (e.g., adult
tetanus-diphtheria toxoid [Td], pediatric diphtheria-tetanus toxoid [DT],
and tetanus toxoid) (10,11). Such reactions are thought to result
from the formation of antigen-antibody complexes. Optimal record keeping,
maintaining patient histories, and adhering to recommended schedules can
decrease the incidence of such reactions without adversely affecting
immunity.
Simultaneous Administration
Experimental evidence and extensive clinical experience have strengthened
the scientific basis for administering vaccines simultaneously (i.e., during
the same office visit, not combined in the same syringe). Simultaneously
administering all vaccines for which a person is eligible is critical,
including for childhood vaccination programs, because simultaneous
administration increases the probability that a child will be fully
immunized at the appropriate age. A study conducted during a measles
outbreak demonstrated that approximately one third of measles cases among
unvaccinated but vaccine-eligible preschool children could have been
prevented if MMR had been administered at the same visit when another
vaccine was administered (12). Simultaneous administration also is
critical when preparing for foreign travel and if uncertainty exists that a
person will return for further doses of vaccine.
Simultaneously administering the most widely used live and inactivated
vaccines have produced seroconversion rates and rates of adverse reactions
similar to those observed when the vaccines are administered separately (13--16).
Routinely administering all vaccines simultaneously is recommended for
children who are the appropriate age to receive them and for whom no
specific contraindications exist at the time of the visit. Administering
combined MMR vaccine yields results similar to administering individual
measles, mumps, and rubella vaccines at different sites. Therefore, no
medical basis exists for administering these vaccines separately for routine
vaccination instead of the preferred MMR combined vaccine (6).
Administering separate antigens would result in a delay in protection for
the deferred components. Response to MMR and varicella vaccines administered
on the same day is identical to vaccines administered a month apart (17).
No evidence exists that OPV interferes with parenterally administered live
vaccines. OPV can be administered simultaneously or at any interval before
or after parenteral live vaccines. No data exist regarding the
immunogenicity of oral Ty21a typhoid vaccine when administered concurrently
or within 30 days of live virus vaccines. In the absence of such data, if
typhoid vaccination is warranted, it should not be delayed because of
administration of virus vaccines (18).
Simultaneously administering pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine and
inactivated influenza vaccine elicits a satisfactory antibody response
without increasing the incidence or severity of adverse reactions (19).
Simultaneously administering pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine and
inactivated influenza vaccine is strongly recommended for all persons for
whom both vaccines are indicated.
Hepatitis B vaccine administered with yellow fever vaccine is as safe and
immunogenic as when these vaccines are administered separately (20).
Measles and yellow fever vaccines have been administered safely at the same
visit and without reduction of immunogenicity of each of the components (21,22).
Depending on vaccines administered in the first year of life, children
aged 12--15 months can receive <7 injections during a single visit
(MMR, varicella, Hib, pneumococcal conjugate, diphtheria and tetanus toxoids
and acellular pertussis [DTaP], IPV, and hepatitis B vaccines). To help
reduce the number of injections at the 12--15-month visit, the IPV primary
series can be completed before the child's first birthday. MMR and varicella
vaccines should be administered at the same visit that occurs as soon as
possible on or after the first birthday. The majority of children aged 1
year who have received two (polyribosylribitol phosphate-meningococcal outer
membrane protein [PRP-OMP]) or three (PRP-tetanus [PRP-T], diphtheria CRM197
[CRM, cross-reactive material] protein conjugate [HbOC]) prior doses of Hib
vaccine, and three prior doses of DTaP and pneumococcal conjugate vaccine
have developed protection (23,24).
The third (PRP-OMP) or fourth (PRP-T, HbOC) dose of the Hib series, and the
fourth doses of DTaP and pneumococcal conjugate vaccines are critical in
boosting antibody titer and ensuring continued protection (24--26).
However, the booster dose of the Hib or pneumococcal conjugate series can be
deferred until ages 15--18 months for children who are likely to return for
future visits. The fourth dose of DTaP is recommended to be administered at
ages 15--18 months, but can be administered as early as age 12 months under
certain circumstances (25).
For infants at low risk for infection with hepatitis B virus (i.e., the
mother tested negative for hepatitis B surface antigen [HBsAg] at the time
of delivery and the child is not of Asian or Pacific Islander descent), the
hepatitis B vaccine series can be completed at any time during ages 6--18
months. Recommended spacing of doses should be maintained (Table
1).
Use of combination vaccines can reduce the number of injections required
at an office visit. Licensed combination vaccines can be used whenever any
components of the combination are indicated and its other components are not
contraindicated. Use of licensed combination vaccines is preferred over
separate injection of their equivalent component vaccines (27).
Only combination vaccines approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
should be used. Individual vaccines must never be mixed in the same syringe
unless they are specifically approved for mixing by FDA. Only one vaccine (DTaP
and PRP-T Hib vaccine, marketed as TriHIBit® [manufactured by
Aventis Pasteur]) is FDA-approved for mixing in the same syringe. This
vaccine should not be used for primary vaccination in infants aged 2, 4, and
6 months, but it can be used as a booster after any Hib vaccine.
Nonsimultaneous Administration
Inactivated vaccines do not interfere with the immune response to other
inactivated vaccines or to live vaccines. An inactivated vaccine can be
administered either simultaneously or at any time before or after a
different inactivated vaccine or live vaccine (Table 2).
The immune response to one live-virus vaccine might be impaired if
administered within 30 days of another live-virus vaccine (28,29).
Data are limited concerning interference between live vaccines. In a study
conducted in two U.S. health maintenance organizations, persons who received
varicella vaccine <30 days after MMR vaccination had an increased risk for
varicella vaccine failure (i.e., varicella disease in a vaccinated person)
of 2.5-fold compared with those who received varicella vaccine before or
>30 days after MMR (30).
In contrast, a 1999 study determined that the response to yellow fever
vaccine is not affected by monovalent measles vaccine administered 1--27
days earlier (21). The effect of nonsimultaneously administering
rubella, mumps, varicella, and yellow fever vaccines is unknown.
To minimize the potential risk for interference, parenterally
administered live vaccines not administered on the same day should be
administered >4 weeks apart whenever possible (Table
2). If parenterally administered live vaccines are separated by <4
weeks, the vaccine administered second should not be counted as a valid dose
and should be repeated. The repeat dose should be administered >4
weeks after the last, invalid dose. Yellow fever vaccine can be administered
at any time after single-antigen measles vaccine. Ty21a typhoid vaccine and
parenteral live vaccines (i.e., MMR, varicella, yellow fever) can be
administered simultaneously or at any interval before or after each other,
if indicated.
Spacing of Antibody-Containing Products and Vaccines
Live Vaccines
Ty21a typhoid and yellow fever vaccines can be administered at any time
before, concurrent with, or after administering any immune globulin or
hyperimmune globulin (e.g., hepatitis B immune globulin and rabies immune
globulin). Blood (e.g., whole blood, packed red blood cells, and plasma) and
other antibody-containing blood products (e.g., immune globulin, hyperimmune
globulin, and intravenous immune globulin [IGIV]) can inhibit the immune
response to measles and rubella vaccines for >3 months (31,32).
The effect of blood and immune globulin preparations on the response to
mumps and varicella vaccines is unknown, but commercial immune globulin
preparations contain antibodies to these viruses. Blood products available
in the United States are unlikely to contain a substantial amount of
antibody to yellow fever vaccine virus. The length of time that interference
with parenteral live vaccination (except yellow fever vaccine) can persist
after the antibody-containing product is a function of the amount of
antigen-specific antibody contained in the product (31--33).
Therefore, after an antibody-containing product is received, parenteral live
vaccines (except yellow fever vaccine) should be delayed until the passive
antibody has degraded (Table 3). Recommended intervals
between receipt of various blood products and measles-containing vaccine and
varicella vaccine are listed in this report (Table 4).
If a dose of parenteral live-virus vaccine (except yellow fever vaccine) is
administered after an antibody-containing product but at an interval shorter
than recommended in this report, the vaccine dose should be repeated unless
serologic testing indicates a response to the vaccine. The repeat dose or
serologic testing should be performed after the interval indicated for the
antibody-containing product (Table 4).
Although passively acquired antibodies can interfere with the response to
rubella vaccine, the low dose of anti-Rho(D) globulin administered to
postpartum women has not been demonstrated to reduce the response to the
RA27/3 strain rubella vaccine (34). Because of the importance of
rubella immunity among childbearing-age women (6,35),
the postpartum vaccination of rubella-susceptible women with rubella or MMR
vaccine should not be delayed because of receipt of anti-Rho(D) globulin or
any other blood product during the last trimester of pregnancy or at
delivery. These women should be vaccinated immediately after delivery and,
if possible, tested >3 months later to ensure immunity to rubella
and, if necessary, to measles (6).
Interference can occur if administering an antibody-containing product
becomes necessary after administering MMR, its individual components, or
varicella vaccine. Usually, vaccine virus replication and stimulation of
immunity will occur 1--2 weeks after vaccination. Thus, if the interval
between administering any of these vaccines and subsequent administration of
an antibody-containing product is <14 days, vaccination should be repeated
after the recommended interval (Tables 3,4),
unless serologic testing indicates that antibodies were produced.
A humanized mouse monoclonal antibody product (palivizumab) is available
for prevention of respiratory syncytial virus infection among infants and
young children. This product contains only antibody to respiratory syncytial
virus; hence, it will not interfere with immune response to live or
inactivated vaccines.
Inactivated Vaccines
Antibody-containing products interact less with inactivated vaccines,
toxoids, recombinant subunit, and polysaccharide vaccines than with live
vaccines (36). Therefore, administering inactivated vaccines and
toxoids either simultaneously with or at any interval before or after
receipt of an antibody-containing product should not substantially impair
development of a protective antibody response (Table 3).
The vaccine or toxoid and antibody preparation should be administered at
different sites by using the standard recommended dose. Increasing the
vaccine dose volume or number of vaccinations is not indicated or
recommended.
Interchangeability of Vaccines from Different Manufacturers
Numerous vaccines are available from different ma00048610.htmnufacturers,
and these vaccines usually are not identical in antigen content or amount or
method of formulation. Manufacturers use different production processes, and
their products might contain different concentrations of antigen per dose or
different stabilizers or preservatives.
Available data indicate that infants who receive sequential doses of
different Hib conjugate, hepatitis B, and hepatitis A vaccines produce a
satisfactory antibody response after a complete primary series (37--40).
All brands of Hib conjugate, hepatitis B,§ and hepatitis A
vaccines are interchangeable within their respective series. If different
brands of Hib conjugate vaccine are administered, a total of three doses is
considered adequate for the primary series among infants. After completing
the primary series, any Hib conjugate vaccine can be used for the booster
dose at ages 12--18 months.
Data are limited regarding the safety, immunogenicity, and efficacy of
using acellular pertussis (as DTaP) vaccines from different manufacturers
for successive doses of the pertussis series. Available data from one study
indicate that, for the first three doses of the DTaP series, one or two
doses of Tripedia® (manufactured by Aventis Pasteur) followed by
Infanrix® (manufactured by GlaxoSmithKline) for the remaining
doses(s) is comparable to three doses of Tripedia with regard to
immunogenicity, as measured by antibodies to diphtheria, tetanus, and
pertussis toxoid, and filamentous hemagglutinin (41). However, in the
absence of a clear serologic correlate of protection for pertussis, the
relevance of these immunogenicity data for protection against pertussis is
unknown. Whenever feasible, the same brand of DTaP vaccine should be used
for all doses of the vaccination series; however, vaccination providers
might not know or have available the type of DTaP vaccine previously
administered to a child. In this situation, any DTaP vaccine should be used
to continue or complete the series. Vaccination should not be deferred
because the brand used for previous doses is not available or is unknown (25,42).
Lapsed Vaccination Schedule
Vaccination providers are encouraged to administer vaccines as close to
the recommended intervals as possible. However, longer-than-recommended
intervals between doses do not reduce final antibody concentrations,
although protection might not be attained until the recommended number of
doses has been administered. An interruption in the vaccination schedule
does not require restarting the entire series of a vaccine or toxoid or the
addition of extra doses.
Unknown or Uncertain Vaccination Status
Vaccination providers frequently encounter persons who do not have
adequate documentation of vaccinations. Providers should only accept
written, dated records as evidence of vaccination. With the exception of
pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine (43),
self-reported doses of vaccine without written documentation should not be
accepted. Although vaccinations should not be postponed if records cannot be
found, an attempt to locate missing records should be made by contacting
previous health-care providers and searching for a personally held record.
If records cannot be located, these persons should be considered susceptible
and should be started on the age-appropriate vaccination schedule. Serologic
testing for immunity is an alternative to vaccination for certain antigens
(e.g., measles, mumps, rubella, varicella, tetanus, diphtheria, hepatitis A,
hepatitis B, and poliovirus) (see Vaccination of Internationally Adopted
Children).
Contraindications and
Precautions
Contraindications and precautions to vaccination dictate circumstances
when vaccines will not be administered. The majority of contraindications
and precautions are temporary, and the vaccination can be administered
later. A contraindication is a condition in a recipient that increases the
risk for a serious adverse reaction. A vaccine will not be administered when
a contraindication is present. For example, administering influenza vaccine
to a person with an anaphylactic allergy to egg protein could cause serious
illness in or death of the recipient.
National standards for pediatric immunization practices have been
established and include true contraindications and precautions to
vaccination (Table 5) (1).
The only true contraindication applicable to all vaccines is a history of a
severe allergic reaction after a prior dose of vaccine or to a vaccine
constituent (unless the recipient has been desensitized). Severely
immunocompromised persons should not receive live vaccines. Children who
experience an encephalopathy <7 days after administration of a
previous dose of diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and whole-cell pertussis
vaccine (DTP) or DTaP not attributable to another identifiable cause should
not receive further doses of a vaccine that contains pertussis. Because of
the theoretical risk to the fetus, women known to be pregnant should not
receive live attenuated virus vaccines (see Vaccination During Pregnancy).
A precaution is a condition in a recipient that might increase the risk
for a serious adverse reaction or that might compromise the ability of the
vaccine to produce immunity (e.g., administering measles vaccine to a person
with passive immunity to measles from a blood transfusion). Injury could
result, or a person might experience a more severe reaction to the vaccine
than would have otherwise been expected; however, the risk for this
happening is less than expected with a contraindication. Under normal
circumstances, vaccinations should be deferred when a precaution is present.
However, a vaccination might be indicated in the presence of a precaution
because the benefit of protection from the vaccine outweighs the risk for an
adverse reaction. For example, caution should be exercised in vaccinating a
child with DTaP who, within 48 hours of receipt of a prior dose of DTP or
DTaP, experienced fever >40.5C (105F); had persistent, inconsolable
crying for >3 hours; collapsed or experienced a shock-like state; or
had a seizure <3 days after receiving the previous dose of DTP or
DTaP. However, administering a pertussis-containing vaccine should be
considered if the risk for pertussis is increased (e.g., during a pertussis
outbreak) (25).
The presence of a moderate or severe acute illness with or without a fever
is a precaution to administration of all vaccines. Other precautions are
listed in this report (Table 5).
Physicians and other health-care providers might inappropriately consider
certain conditions or circumstances to be true contraindications or
precautions to vaccination. This misconception results in missed
opportunities to administer recommended vaccines (44). Likewise,
physicians and other health-care providers might fail to understand what
constitutes a true contraindication or precaution and might administer a
vaccine when it should be withheld. This practice can result in an increased
risk for an adverse reaction to the vaccine. Conditions often
inappropriately regarded as contraindications to vaccination are listed in
this report (Table 5). Among the most common are
diarrhea and minor upper-respiratory tract illnesses (including otitis
media) with or without fever, mild to moderate local reactions to a previous
dose of vaccine, current antimicrobial therapy, and the convalescent phase
of an acute illness.
The decision to administer or delay vaccination because of a current or
recent acute illness depends on the severity of symptoms and the etiology of
the disease. All vaccines can be administered to persons with minor acute
illness (e.g., diarrhea or mild upper-respiratory tract infection with or
without fever). Studies indicate that failure to vaccinate children with
minor illnesses can seriously impede vaccination efforts (45--47).
Among persons whose compliance with medical care cannot be ensured, use of
every opportunity to provide appropriate vaccinations is critical.
The majority of studies support the safety and efficacy of vaccinating
persons who have mild illness (48--50). For example, in the United
States, >97% of children with mild illnesses produced measles antibody after
vaccination (51). Only one limited study has reported a lower rate of
seroconversion (79%) to the measles component of MMR vaccine among children
with minor, afebrile upper-respiratory tract infections (52).
Therefore, vaccination should not be delayed because of the presence of mild
respiratory tract illness or other acute illness with or without fever.
Persons with moderate or severe acute illness should be vaccinated as
soon as they have recovered from the acute phase of the illness. This
precaution avoids superimposing adverse effects of the vaccine on the
underlying illness or mistakenly attributing a manifestation of the
underlying illness to the vaccine.
Routine physical examinations and measuring temperatures are not
prerequisites for vaccinating infants and children who appear to be healthy.
Asking the parent or guardian if the child is ill and then postponing
vaccination for those with moderate to severe illness, or proceeding with
vaccination if no contraindications exist, are appropriate procedures in
childhood immunization programs.
A family history of seizures or other central nervous system disorders is
not a contraindication to administration of pertussis or other vaccines.
However, delaying pertussis vaccination for infants and children with a
history of previous seizures until the child's neurologic status has been
assessed is prudent. Pertussis vaccine should not be administered to infants
with evolving neurologic conditions until a treatment regimen has been
established and the condition has stabilized (25).
Vaccine Administration
Infection Control and Sterile Technique
Persons administering vaccines should follow necessary precautions to
minimize risk for spreading disease. Hands should be washed with soap and
water or cleansed with an alcohol-based waterless antiseptic hand rub
between each patient contact. Gloves are not required when administering
vaccinations, unless persons administering vaccinations are likely to come
into contact with potentially infectious body fluids or have open lesions on
their hands. Syringes and needles used for injections must be sterile and
disposable to minimize the risk of contamination. A separate needle and
syringe should be used for each injection. Changing needles between drawing
vaccine from a vial and injecting it into a recipient is unnecessary.
Different vaccines should never be mixed in the same syringe unless
specifically licensed for such use.
Disposable needles and syringes should be discarded in labeled,
puncture-proof containers to prevent inadvertent needle-stick injury or
reuse. Safety needles or needle-free injection devices also can reduce the
risk for injury and should be used whenever available (see Occupational
Safety Regulations).
Recommended Routes of Injection and Needle Length
Routes of administration are recommended by the manufacturer for each
immunobiologic. Deviation from the recommended route of administration might
reduce vaccine efficacy (53,54) or increase local adverse reactions (55--57).
Injectable immunobiologics should be administered where the likelihood of
local, neural, vascular, or tissue injury is limited. Vaccines containing
adjuvants should be injected into the muscle mass; when administered
subcutaneously or intradermally, they can cause local irritation, induration,
skin discoloration, inflammation, and granuloma formation.
Subcutaneous Injections
Subcutaneous injections usually are administered at a 45-degree angle
into the thigh of infants aged <12 months and in the upper-outer triceps
area of persons aged >12 months. Subcutaneous injections can be
administered into the upper-outer triceps area of an infant, if necessary. A
5/8-inch, 23--25-gauge needle should be inserted into the subcutaneous
tissue.
Intramuscular Injections
Intramuscular injections are administered at a 90-degree angle into the
anterolateral aspect of the thigh or the deltoid muscle of the upper arm.
The buttock should not be used for administration of vaccines or toxoids
because of the potential risk of injury to the sciatic nerve (58). In
addition, injection into the buttock has been associated with decreased
immunogenicity of hepatitis B and rabies vaccines in adults, presumably
because of inadvertent subcutaneous injection or injection into deep fat
tissue (53,59).
For all intramuscular injections, the needle should be long enough to
reach the muscle mass and prevent vaccine from seeping into subcutaneous
tissue, but not so long as to involve underlying nerves and blood vessels or
bone (54,60--62). Vaccinators should be familiar with the anatomy of
the area into which they are injecting vaccine. An individual decision on
needle size and site of injection must be made for each person on the basis
of age, the volume of the material to be administered, the size of the
muscle, and the depth below the muscle surface into which the material is to
be injected.
Although certain vaccination specialists advocate aspiration (i.e., the
syringe plunger pulled back before injection), no data exist to document the
necessity for this procedure. If aspiration results in blood in the needle
hub, the needle should be withdrawn and a new site should be selected.
Infants (persons aged <12 months). Among the majority of
infants, the anterolateral aspect of the thigh provides the largest muscle
mass and is therefore the recommended site for injection. For the majority
of infants, a 7/8--1-inch, 22--25-gauge needle is sufficient to penetrate
muscle in the infant's thigh.
Toddlers and Older Children (persons aged >12 months--18
years). The deltoid muscle can be used if the muscle mass is
adequate. The needle size can range from 22 to 25 gauge and from 7/8 to 1¼
inches, on the basis of the size of the muscle. For toddlers, the
anterolateral thigh can be used, but the needle should be longer, usually 1
inch.
Adults (persons aged >18 years). For adults, the deltoid
muscle is recommended for routine intramuscular vaccinations. The
anterolateral thigh can be used. The suggested needle size is 1--1½ inches
and 22--25 gauge.
Intradermal Injections
Intradermal injections are usually administered on the volar surface of
the forearm. With the bevel facing upwards, a 3/8--3/4-inch, 25--27-gauge
needle can be inserted into the epidermis at an angle parallel to the long
axis of the forearm. The needle should be inserted so that the entire bevel
penetrates the skin and the injected solution raises a small bleb. Because
of the small amounts of antigen used in intradermal vaccinations, care must
be taken not to inject the vaccine subcutaneously because it can result in a
suboptimal immunologic response.
Multiple Vaccinations
If >2 vaccine preparations are administered or if vaccine and an
immune globulin preparation are administered simultaneously, each
preparation should be administered at a different anatomic site. If >2
injections must be administered in a single limb, the thigh is usually the
preferred site because of the greater muscle mass; the injections should be
sufficiently separated (i.e., >1 inch) so that any local reactions
can be differentiated (55,63). For older children and adults, the
deltoid muscle can be used for multiple intramuscular injections, if
necessary. The location of each injection should documented in the person's
medical record.
Jet Injection
Jet injectors (JIs) are needle-free devices that drive liquid medication
through a nozzle orifice, creating a narrow stream under high pressure that
penetrates skin to deliver a drug or vaccine into intradermal, subcutaneous,
or intramuscular tissues (64,65). Increasing attention to JI
technology as an alternative to conventional needle injection has resulted
from recent efforts to reduce the frequency of needle-stick injuries to
health-care workers (66) and to overcome the improper reuse and other
drawbacks of needles and syringes in economically developing countries (67--69).
JIs have been reported safe and effective in administering different live
and inactivated vaccines for viral and bacterial diseases (69). The
immune responses generated are usually equivalent to, and occasionally
greater than, those induced by needle injection. However, local reactions or
injury (e.g., redness, induration, pain, blood, and ecchymosis at the
injection site) can be more frequent for vaccines delivered by JIs compared
with needle injection (65,69).
Certain JIs were developed for situations in which substantial numbers of
persons must be vaccinated rapidly, but personnel or supplies are
insufficient to do so with conventional needle injection. Such high-workload
devices vaccinate consecutive patients from the same nozzle orifice, fluid
pathway, and dose chamber, which is refilled automatically from attached
vials containing <50 doses each. Since the 1950s, these devices have
been used extensively among military recruits and for mass vaccination
campaigns for disease control and eradication (64). An outbreak of
hepatitis B among patients receiving injections from a multiple-use--nozzle
JI was documented (70,71),
and subsequent laboratory, field, and animal studies demonstrated that such
devices could become contaminated with blood (69,72,73).
No U.S.-licensed, high-workload vaccination devices of unquestioned
safety are available to vaccination programs. Efforts are under way for the
research and development of new high-workload JIs using disposable-cartridge
technology that avoids reuse of any unsterilized components having contact
with the medication fluid pathway or patient's blood. Until such devices
become licensed and available, the use of existing multiple-use--nozzle JIs
should be limited. Use can be considered when the theoretical risk for
bloodborne disease transmission is outweighed by the benefits of rapid
vaccination with limited personnel in responding to serious disease threats
(e.g., pandemic influenza or bioterrorism event), and by any competing risks
of iatrogenic or occupational infections resulting from conventional needles
and syringes. Before such emergency use of multiple-use--nozzle JIs,
health-care workers should consult with local, state, national, or
international health agencies or organizations that have experience in their
use.
In the 1990s, a new generation of low-workload JIs were introduced with
disposable cartridges serving as dose chambers and nozzle (69). With
the provision of a new sterile cartridge for each patient and other correct
use, these devices avoid the safety concerns described previously for
multiple-use--nozzle devices. They can be used in accordance with their
labeling for intradermal, subcutaneous, or intramuscular administration.
Methods for Alleviating Discomfort and Pain Associated with
Vaccination
Comfort measures and distraction techniques (e.g., playing music or
pretending to blow away the pain) might help children cope with the
discomfort associated with vaccination. Pretreatment (30-60 minutes before
injection) with 5% topical lidocaine-prilocaine emulsion (EMLA®
cream or disk [manufactured by AstraZeneca LP]) can decrease the pain of
vaccination among infants by causing superficial anesthesia (74,75).
Preliminary evidence indicates that this cream does not interfere with the
immune response to MMR (76). Topical lidocaine-prilocaine emulsion
should not be used on infants aged <12 months who are receiving treatment
with methemoglobin-inducing agents because of the possible development of
methemoglobinemia (77). Acetaminophen has been used among children to
reduce the discomfort and fever associated with vaccination (78).
However, acetaminophen can cause formation of methemoglobin and, thus, might
interact with lidocaine-prilocaine cream, if used concurrently (77).
Ibuprofen or other nonaspirin analgesic can be used, if necessary. Use of a
topical refrigerant (vapocoolant) spray can reduce the short-term pain
associated with injections and can be as effective as lidocaine-prilocaine
cream (79). Administering sweet-tasting fluid orally immediately
before injection can result in a calming or analgesic effect among certain
infants.
Nonstandard Vaccination Practices
Recommendations regarding route, site, and dosage of immunobiologics are
derived from data from clinical trials, from practical experience, and from
theoretical considerations. ACIP strongly discourages variations from the
recommended route, site, volume, or number of doses of any vaccine.
Variation from the recommended route and site can result in inadequate
protection. The immunogenicity of hepatitis B vaccine and rabies vaccine is
substantially lower when the gluteal rather than the deltoid site is used
for administration (53,59). Hepatitis B vaccine administered
intradermally can result in a lower seroconversion rate and final titer of
hepatitis B surface antibody than when administered by the deltoid
intramuscular route (80,81). Doses of rabies vaccine administered in
the gluteal site should not be counted as valid doses and should be
repeated. Hepatitis B vaccine administered by any route or site other than
intramuscularly in the anterolateral thigh or deltoid muscle should not be
counted as valid and should be repeated, unless serologic testing indicates
that an adequate response has been achieved.
Live attenuated parenteral vaccines (e.g., MMR, varicella, or yellow
fever) and certain inactivated vaccines (e.g., IPV, pneumococcal
polysaccharide, and anthrax) are recommended by the manufacturers to be
administered by subcutaneous injection. Pneumococcal polysaccharide and IPV
are approved for either intramuscular or subcutaneous administration.
Response to these vaccines probably will not be affected if the vaccines are
administered by the intramuscular rather then subcutaneous route. Repeating
doses of vaccine administered by the intramuscular route rather than by the
subcutaneous route is unnecessary.
Administering volumes smaller than those recommended (e.g., split doses)
can result in inadequate protection. Using larger than the recommended dose
can be hazardous because of excessive local or systemic concentrations of
antigens or other vaccine constituents. Using multiple reduced doses that
together equal a full immunizing dose or using smaller divided doses is not
endorsed or recommended. Any vaccination using less than the standard dose
should not be counted, and the person should be revaccinated according to
age, unless serologic testing indicates that an adequate response has been
achieved.
Preventing Adverse Reactions
Vaccines are intended to produce active immunity to specific antigens. An
adverse reaction is an untoward effect that occurs after a vaccination that
is extraneous to the vaccine's primary purpose of producing immunity.
Adverse reactions also are called vaccine side effects.
All vaccines might cause adverse reactions (82).
Vaccine adverse reactions are classified by three general categories: local,
systemic, and allergic. Local reactions are usually the least severe and
most frequent. Systemic reactions (e.g., fever) occur less frequently than
local reactions. Serious allergic reactions (e.g., anaphylaxis) are the most
severe and least frequent. Severe adverse reactions are rare.
The key to preventing the majority of serious adverse reactions is
screening. Every person who administers vaccines should screen patients for
contraindications and precautions to the vaccine before it is administered (Table
5). Standardized screening questionnaires have been developed and are
available from certain state immunization programs and other sources (e.g.,
the Immunization Action Coalition at
http://www.immunize.org [accessed October 31, 2001]).
Severe allergic reactions after vaccination are rare. However, all
physicians and other health-care providers who administer vaccines should
have procedures in place for the emergency management of a person who
experiences an anaphylactic reaction. All vaccine providers should be
familiar with the office emergency plan and be certified in cardiopulmonary
resuscitation.
Syncope (vasovagal or vasodepressor reaction) can occur after
vaccination, most commonly among adolescents and young adults. During
1990--August 2001, a total of 2,269 reports to the Vaccine Adverse Event
Reporting system were coded as syncope. Forty percent of these episodes were
reported among persons aged 10--18 years (CDC, unpublished data, 2001).
Approximately 12% of reported syncopal episodes resulted in hospitalization
because of injury or medical evaluation. Serious injury, including skull
fractures and cerebral bleeding, have been reported to result from syncopal
episodes after vaccination. A published review of syncope after vaccination
reported that 63% of syncopal episodes occurred <5 minutes after
vaccination, and 89% occurred within 15 minutes after vaccination (83).
Although syncopal episodes are uncommon and serious allergic reactions are
rare, certain vaccination specialists recommend that persons be observed for
15--20 minutes after being vaccinated, if possible (84). If syncope
develops, patients should be observed until the symptoms resolve.
Managing Acute Vaccine Reactions
Although rare after vaccination, the immediate onset and life-threatening
nature of an anaphylactic reaction require that personnel and facilities
providing vaccinations be capable of providing initial care for suspected
anaphylaxis. Epinephrine and equipment for maintaining an airway should be
available for immediate use.
Anaphylaxis usually begins within minutes of vaccine administration.
Rapidly recognizing and initiating treatment are required to prevent
possible progression to cardiovascular collapse. If flushing, facial edema,
urticaria, itching, swelling of the mouth or throat, wheezing, difficulty
breathing, or other signs of anaphylaxis occur, the patient should be placed
in a recumbent position with the legs elevated. Aqueous epinephrine (1:1000)
should be administered and can be repeated within 10--20 minutes (84).
A dose of diphenhydramine hydrochloride might shorten the reaction, but it
will have little immediate effect. Maintenance of an airway and oxygen
administration might be necessary. Arrangements should be made for immediate
transfer to an emergency facility for further evaluation and treatment.
Occupational Safety Regulations
Bloodborne diseases (e.g., hepatitis B and C and human immunodeficiency
virus [HIV]) are occupational hazards for health-care workers. In November
2000, to reduce the incidence of needle-stick injuries among health-care
workers and the consequent risk for bloodborne diseases acquired from
patients, the Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act was signed into law. The
act directed the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to
strengthen its existing bloodborne pathogen standards. Those standards were
revised and became effective in April 2001 (66). These federal
regulations require that safer injection devices (e.g., needle-shielding
syringes or needle-free injectors) be used for parenteral vaccination in all
clinical settings when such devices are appropriate, commercially available,
and capable of achieving the intended clinical purpose. The rules also
require that records be kept documenting the incidence of injuries caused by
medical sharps (except in workplaces with <10 employees) and that
nonmanagerial employees be involved in the evaluation and selection of safer
devices to be procured.
Needle-shielding or needle-free devices that might satisfy the
occupational safety regulations for administering parenteral injections are
available in the United States and are listed at multiple websites (69,85--87).¶
Additional information regarding implementation and enforcement of these
regulations is available at the OSHA website at
http://www.osha-slc.gov/needlesticks (accessed October 31, 2001).
Storage and Handling of
Immunobiologics
Failure to adhere to recommended specifications for storage and handling
of immunobiologics can reduce potency, resulting in an inadequate immune
response in the recipient. Recommendations included in a product's package
insert, including reconstitution of the vaccine, should be followed
carefully. Vaccine quality is the shared responsibility of all parties from
the time the vaccine is manufactured until administration. All vaccines
should be inspected upon delivery and monitored during storage to ensure
that the cold chain has been maintained. Vaccines should continue to be
stored at recommended temperatures immediately upon receipt. Certain
vaccines (e.g., MMR, varicella, and yellow fever) are sensitive to increased
temperature. All other vaccines are sensitive to freezing. Mishandled
vaccine usually is not distinguishable from potent vaccine. When in doubt
regarding the appropriate handling of a vaccine, vaccination providers
should contact the manufacturer. Vaccines that have been mishandled (e.g.,
inactivated vaccines and toxoids that have been exposed to freezing
temperatures) or that are beyond their expiration date should not be
administered. If mishandled or expired vaccines are administered
inadvertently, they should not be counted as valid doses and should be
repeated, unless serologic testing indicates a response to the vaccine.
Live attenuated virus vaccines should be administered promptly after
reconstitution. Varicella vaccine must be administered <30 minutes
after reconstitution. Yellow fever vaccine must be used <1 hour after
reconstitution. MMR vaccine must be administered <8 hours after
reconstitution. If not administered within these prescribed time periods
after reconstitution, the vaccine must be discarded.
The majority of vaccines have a similar appearance after being drawn into
a syringe. Instances in which the wrong vaccine inadvertently was
administered are attributable to the practice of prefilling syringes or
drawing doses of a vaccine into multiple syringes before their immediate
need. ACIP discourages the routine practice of prefilling syringes because
of the potential for such administration errors. To prevent errors, vaccine
doses should not be drawn into a syringe until immediately before
administration. In certain circumstances where a single vaccine type is
being used (e.g., in advance of a community influenza vaccination campaign),
filling multiple syringes before their immediate use can be considered. Care
should be taken to ensure that the cold chain is maintained until the
vaccine is administered. When the syringes are filled, the type of vaccine,
lot number, and date of filling must be carefully labeled on each syringe,
and the doses should be administered as soon as possible after filling.
Certain vaccines are distributed in multidose vials. When opened, the
remaining doses from partially used multidose vials can be administered
until the expiration date printed on the vial or vaccine packaging, provided
that the vial has been stored correctly and that the vaccine is not visibly
contaminated.
Special Situations
Concurrently Administering Antimicrobial Agents and Vaccines
With limited exceptions, using an antibiotic is not a contraindication to
vaccination. Antimicrobial agents have no effect on the response to live
attenuated vaccines, except live oral Ty21a typhoid vaccine, and have no
effect on inactivated, recombinant subunit, or polysaccharide vaccines or
toxoids. Ty21a typhoid vaccine should not be administered to persons
receiving antimicrobial agents until >24 hours after any antibiotic
dose (18).
Antiviral drugs used for treatment or prophylaxis of influenza virus
infections have no effect on the response to inactivated influenza vaccine (88).
Antiviral drugs active against herpesviruses (e.g., acyclovir or
valacyclovir) might reduce the efficacy of live attenuated varicella
vaccine. These drugs should be discontinued >24 hours before
administration of varicella vaccine, if possible.
The antimalarial drug mefloquine (Lariam® [manufactured by
Roche Laboratories, Inc.]) could affect the immune response to oral Ty21a
typhoid vaccine if both are taken simultaneously (89,90). To minimize
this effect, administering Ty21a typhoid vaccine >24 hours before or
after a dose of mefloquine is prudent.
Tuberculosis Screening and Skin Test Reactivity
Measles illness, severe acute or chronic infections, HIV infection, and
malnutrition can create an anergic state during which the tuberculin skin
test (usually known as purified protein derivative [PPD] skin
test) might give a false negative reaction (91--93). Although any
live attenuated measles vaccine can theoretically suppress PPD reactivity,
the degree of suppression is probably less than that occurring from acute
infection from wild measles virus. Although routine PPD screening of all
children is no longer recommended, PPD screening is sometimes needed at the
same time as administering a measles-containing vaccine (e.g., for
well-child care, school entrance, or for employee health reasons), and the
following options should be considered:
- PPD and measles-containing vaccine can be administered at the same
visit (preferred option). Simultaneously administering PPD and
measles-containing vaccine does not interfere with reading the PPD result
at 48--72 hours and ensures that the person has received measles vaccine.
- If the measles-containing vaccine has been administered recently, PPD
screening should be delayed >4 weeks after vaccination. A delay in
performing PPD will remove the concern of any theoretical but transient
suppression of PPD reactivity from the vaccine.
- PPD screening can be performed and read before administering the
measles-containing vaccine. This option is the least favored because it
will delay receipt of the measles-containing vaccine.
No data exist for the potential degree of PPD suppression that might be
associated with other parenteral live attenuated virus vaccines (e.g.,
varicella or yellow fever). Nevertheless, in the absence of data, following
guidelines for measles-containing vaccine when scheduling PPD screening and
administering other parenteral live attenuated virus vaccines is prudent. If
a risk exists that the opportunity to vaccinate might be missed, vaccination
should not be delayed only because of these theoretical considerations.
Mucosally administered live attenuated virus vaccines (e.g., OPV and
intranasally administered influenza vaccine) are unlikely to affect the
response to PPD. No evidence has been reported that inactivated vaccines,
polysaccharide vaccines, recombinant, or subunit vaccines, or toxoids
interfere with response to PPD.
PPD reactivity in the absence of tuberculosis disease is not a
contraindication to administration of any vaccine, including parenteral live
attenuated virus vaccines. Tuberculosis disease is not a contraindication to
vaccination, unless the person is moderately or severely ill. Although no
studies have reported the effect of MMR vaccine on persons with untreated
tuberculosis, a theoretical basis exists for concern that measles vaccine
might exacerbate tuberculosis (6).
Consequently, before administering MMR to persons with untreated active
tuberculosis, initiating antituberculosis therapy is advisable (6).
Ruling out concurrent immunosuppression (e.g., immunosuppression caused by
HIV infection) before administering live attenuated vaccines is also
prudent.
Severe Allergy to Vaccine Components
Vaccine components can cause allergic reactions among certain recipients.
These reactions can be local or systemic and can include mild to severe
anaphylaxis or anaphylactic-like responses (e.g., generalized urticaria or
hives, wheezing, swelling of the mouth and throat, difficulty breathing,
hypotension, and shock). Allergic reactions might be caused by the vaccine
antigen, residual animal protein, antimicrobial agents, preservatives,
stabilizers, or other vaccine components (94). An extensive listing
of vaccine components, their use, and the vaccines that contain each
component has been published (95) and is also available from CDC's
National Immunization Program website at
http://www.cdc.gov/nip (accessed October 31, 2001).
The most common animal protein allergen is egg protein, which is found in
vaccines prepared by using embryonated chicken eggs (influenza and yellow
fever vaccines). Ordinarily, persons who are able to eat eggs or egg
products safely can receive these vaccines; persons with histories of
anaphylactic or anaphylactic-like allergy to eggs or egg proteins should not
be administered these vaccines. Asking persons if they can eat eggs without
adverse effects is a reasonable way to determine who might be at risk for
allergic reactions from receiving yellow fever and influenza vaccines. A
regimen for administering influenza vaccine to children with egg
hypersensitivity and severe asthma has been developed (96).
Measles and mumps vaccine viruses are grown in chick embryo fibroblast
tissue culture. Persons with a serious egg allergy can receive measles- or
mumps-containing vaccines without skin testing or desensitization to egg
protein (6).
Rubella and varicella vaccines are grown in human diploid cell cultures and
can safely be administered to persons with histories of severe allergy to
eggs or egg proteins. The rare serious allergic reaction after measles or
mumps vaccination or MMR are not believed to be caused by egg antigens, but
to other components of the vaccine (e.g., gelatin) (97--100). MMR,
its component vaccines, and other vaccines contain hydrolyzed gelatin as a
stabilizer. Extreme caution should be exercised when administering vaccines
that contain gelatin to persons who have a history of an anaphylactic
reaction to gelatin or gelatin-containing products. Before administering
gelatin-containing vaccines to such persons, skin testing for sensitivity to
gelatin can be considered. However, no specific protocols for this approach
have been published.
Certain vaccines contain trace amounts of antibiotics or other
preservatives (e.g., neomycin or thimerosal) to which patients might be
severely allergic. The information provided in the vaccine package insert
should be reviewed carefully before deciding if the rare patient with such
allergies should receive the vaccine. No licensed vaccine contains
penicillin or penicillin derivatives.
Certain vaccines contain trace amounts of neomycin. Persons who have
experienced anaphylactic reactions to neomycin should not receive these
vaccines. Most often, neomycin allergy is a contact dermatitis, a
manifestation of a delayed type (cell-mediated) immune response, rather than
anaphylaxis (101,102). A history of delayed type reactions to
neomycin is not a contraindication for administration of these vaccines.
Thimerosal is an organic mercurial compound in use since the 1930s and
added to certain immunobiologic products as a preservative. A joint
statement issued by the U.S. Public Health Service and the American Academy
of Pediatrics (AAP) in 1999 (103)
and agreed to by the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) later in
1999, established the goal of removing thimerosal as soon as possible from
vaccines routinely recommended for infants. Although no evidence exists of
any harm caused by low levels of thimerosal in vaccines and the risk was
only theoretical (104), this goal was established as a precautionary
measure.
The public is concerned about the health effects of mercury exposure of
any type, and the elimination of mercury from vaccines was judged a feasible
means of reducing an infant's total exposure to mercury in a world where
other environmental sources of exposure are more difficult or impossible to
eliminate (e.g., certain foods). Since mid-2001, vaccines routinely
recommended for children have been manufactured without thimerosal as a
preservative and contain either no thimerosal or only trace amounts.
Thimerosal as a preservative is present in certain other vaccines (e.g., Td,
DT, one of two adult hepatitis B vaccines, and influenza vaccine). A trace
thimerosal formulation of one brand of influenza vaccine was licensed by FDA
in September 2001.
Receiving thimerosal-containing vaccines has been believed to lead to
induction of allergy. However, limited scientific basis exists for this
assertion (94). Hypersensitivity to thimerosal usually consists of
local delayed type hypersensitivity reactions (105--107). Thimerosal
elicits positive delayed type hypersensitivity patch tests in 1%--18% of
persons tested, but these tests have limited or no clinical relevance (108,109).
The majority of patients do not experience reactions to thimerosal
administered as a component of vaccines even when patch or intradermal tests
for thimerosal indicate hypersensitivity (109). A localized or
delayed type hypersensitivity reaction to thimerosal is not a
contraindication to receipt of a vaccine that contains thimerosal.
Latex Allergy
Latex is liquid sap from the commercial rubber tree. Latex contains
naturally occurring impurities (e.g., plant proteins and peptides), which
are believed to be responsible for allergic reactions. Latex is processed to
form natural rubber latex and dry natural rubber. Dry natural rubber and
natural rubber latex might contain the same plant impurities as latex but in
lesser amounts. Natural rubber latex is used to produce medical gloves,
catheters, and other products. Dry natural rubber is used in syringe
plungers, vial stoppers, and injection ports on intravascular tubing.
Synthetic rubber and synthetic latex also are used in medical gloves,
syringe plungers, and vial stoppers. Synthetic rubber and synthetic latex do
not contain natural rubber or natural latex, and therefore, do not contain
the impurities linked to allergic reactions.
The most common type of latex sensitivity is contact-type (type 4)
allergy, usually as a result of prolonged contact with latex-containing
gloves (110). However, injection-procedure--associated latex
allergies among patients with diabetes have been described (111--113).
Allergic reactions (including anaphylaxis) after vaccination procedures are
rare. Only one report of an allergic reaction after administering hepatitis
B vaccine in a patient with known severe allergy (anaphylaxis) to latex has
been published (114).
If a person reports a severe (anaphylactic) allergy to latex, vaccines
supplied in vials or syringes that contain natural rubber should not be
administered, unless the benefit of vaccination outweighs the risk of an
allergic reaction to the vaccine. For latex allergies other than
anaphylactic allergies (e.g., a history of contact allergy to latex gloves),
vaccines supplied in vials or syringes that contain dry natural rubber or
natural rubber latex can be administered.
Vaccination of Premature Infants
In the majority of cases, infants born prematurely, regardless of birth
weight, should be vaccinated at the same chronological age and according to
the same schedule and precautions as full-term infants and children. Birth
weight and size are not factors in deciding whether to postpone routine
vaccination of a clinically stable premature infant (115--117),
except for hepatitis B vaccine. The full recommended dose of each vaccine
should be used. Divided or reduced doses are not recommended (118).
Studies demonstrate that decreased seroconversion rates might occur among
certain premature infants with low birth weights (i.e., <2,000 grams) after
administration of hepatitis B vaccine at birth (119). However, by
chronological age 1 month, all premature infants, regardless of initial
birth weight or gestational age are as likely to respond as adequately as
older and larger infants (120--122). A premature infant born to HBsAg-positive
mothers and mothers with unknown HBsAg status must receive immunoprophylaxis
with hepatitis B vaccine and hepatitis B immunoglobulin (HBIG) <12
hours after birth. If these infants weigh <2,000 grams at birth, the initial
vaccine dose should not be counted towards completion of the hepatitis B
vaccine series, and three additional doses of hepatitis B vaccine should be
administered, beginning when the infant is age 1 month. The optimal timing
of the first dose of hepatitis B vaccine for premature infants of HBsAg-negative
mothers with a birth weight of <2,000 grams has not been determined.
However, these infants can receive the first dose of the hepatitis B vaccine
series at chronological age 1 month. Premature infants discharged from the
hospital before chronological age 1 month can also be administered hepatitis
B vaccine at discharge, if they are medically stable and have gained weight
consistently.
Breast-Feeding and Vaccination
Neither inactivated nor live vaccines administered to a lactating woman
affect the safety of breast-feeding for mothers or infants. Breast-feeding
does not adversely affect immunization and is not a contraindication for any
vaccine. Limited data indicate that breast-feeding can enhance the response
to certain vaccine antigens (123). Breast-fed infants should be
vaccinated according to routine recommended schedules (124--126).
Although live vaccines multiply within the mother's body, the majority
have not been demonstrated to be excreted in human milk. Although rubella
vaccine virus might be excreted in human milk, the virus usually does not
infect the infant. If infection does occur, it is well-tolerated because the
viruses are attenuated (127). Inactivated, recombinant, subunit,
polysaccharide, conjugate vaccines and toxoids pose no risk for mothers who
are breast-feeding or for their infants.
Vaccination During Pregnancy
Risk to a developing fetus from vaccination of the mother during
pregnancy is primarily theoretical. No evidence exists of risk from
vaccinating pregnant women with inactivated virus or bacterial vaccines or
toxoids (128,129). Benefits of vaccinating pregnant women usually
outweigh potential risks when the likelihood of disease exposure is high,
when infection would pose a risk to the mother or fetus, and when the
vaccine is unlikely to cause harm.
Td toxoid is indicated routinely for pregnant women. Previously
vaccinated pregnant women who have not received a Td vaccination within the
last 10 years should receive a booster dose. Pregnant women who are not
immunized or only partially immunized against tetanus should complete the
primary series (130).
Depending on when a woman seeks prenatal care and the required interval
between doses, one or two doses of Td can be administered before delivery.
Women for whom the vaccine is indicated, but who have not completed the
recommended three-dose series during pregnancy, should receive follow-up
after delivery to ensure the series is completed.
Women in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy have been
demonstrated to be at increased risk for hospitalization from influenza (131).
Therefore, routine influenza vaccination is recommended for healthy women
who will be beyond the first trimester of pregnancy (i.e., >14 weeks
of gestation) during influenza season (usually December--March in the United
States) (88).
Women who have medical conditions that increase their risk for complications
of influenza should be vaccinated before the influenza season, regardless of
the stage of pregnancy.
IPV can be administered to pregnant women who are at risk for exposure to
wild-type poliovirus infection (4).
Hepatitis B vaccine is recommended for pregnant women at risk for hepatitis
B virus infection (132).
Hepatitis A, pneumococcal polysaccharide, and meningococcal polysaccharide
vaccines should be considered for women at increased risk for those
infections (43,133,134).
Pregnant women who must travel to areas where the risk for yellow fever
is high should receive yellow fever vaccine, because the limited theoretical
risk from vaccination is substantially outweighed by the risk for yellow
fever infection (22,135).
Pregnancy is a contraindication for measles, mumps, rubella, and varicella
vaccines. Although of theoretical concern, no cases of congenital rubella or
varicella syndrome or abnormalities attributable to fetal infection have
been observed among infants born to susceptible women who received rubella
or varicella vaccines during pregnancy (6,136).
Because of the importance of protecting women of childbearing age against
rubella, reasonable practices in any immunization program include asking
women if they are pregnant or intend to become pregnant in the next 4 weeks,
not vaccinating women who state that they are pregnant, explaining the
potential risk for the fetus to women who state that they are not pregnant,
and counseling women who are vaccinated not to become pregnant during the 4
weeks after MMR vaccination (6,35,137).
Routine pregnancy testing of women of childbearing age before administering
a live-virus vaccine is not recommended (6).
If a pregnant woman is inadvertently vaccinated or if she becomes pregnant
within 4 weeks after MMR or varicella vaccination, she should be counseled
regarding the theoretical basis of concern for the fetus; however, MMR or
varicella vaccination during pregnancy should not ordinarily be a reason to
terminate pregnancy (6,8).
Persons who receive MMR vaccine do not transmit the vaccine viruses to
contacts (6).
Transmission of varicella vaccine virus to contacts is rare (138).
MMR and varicella vaccines should be administered when indicated to the
children and other household contacts of pregnant women (6,8).
All pregnant women should be evaluated for immunity to rubella and be
tested for the presence of HBsAg (6,35,132).
Women susceptible to rubella should be vaccinated immediately after
delivery. A woman known to be HBsAg-positive should be followed carefully to
ensure that the infant receives HBIG and begins the hepatitis B vaccine
series <12 hours after birth and that the infant completes the
recommended hepatitis B vaccine series (132).
No known risk exists for the fetus from passive immunization of pregnant
women with immune globulin preparations.
Vaccination of Internationally Adopted Children
The ability of a clinician to determine that a person is protected on the
basis of their country of origin and their records alone is limited.
Internationally adopted children should receive vaccines according to
recommended schedules for children in the United States. Only written
documentation should be accepted as evidence of prior vaccination. Written
records are more likely to predict protection if the vaccines, dates of
administration, intervals between doses, and the child's age at the time of
immunization are comparable to the current U.S. recommendations. Although
vaccines with inadequate potency have been produced in other countries (139,140),
the majority of vaccines used worldwide are produced with adequate quality
control standards and are potent.
The number of American families adopting children from outside the United
States has increased substantially in recent years (141). Adopted
children's birth countries often have immunization schedules that differ
from the recommended childhood immunization schedule in the United States.
Differences in the U.S. immunization schedule and those used in other
countries include the vaccines administered, the recommended ages of
administration, and the number and timing of doses.
Data are inconclusive regarding the extent to which an internationally
adopted child's immunization record reflects the child's protection. A
child's record might indicate administration of MMR vaccine when only
single-antigen measles vaccine was administered. A study of children adopted
from the People's Republic of China, Russia, and Eastern Europe determined
that only 39% (range: 17%--88% by country) of children with documentation of
>3 doses of DTP before adoption had protective levels of diphtheria and
tetanus antitoxin (142). However, antibody testing was performed by
using a hemagglutination assay, which tends to underestimate protection and
cannot directly be compared with antibody concentration (143).
Another study measured antibody to diphtheria and tetanus toxins among 51
children who had records of having received >2 doses of DTP. The
majority of the children were from Russia, Eastern Europe, and Asian
countries, and 78% had received all their vaccine doses in an orphanage.
Overall, 94% had evidence of protection against diphtheria (EIA > 0.1 IU/mL).
A total of 84% had protection against tetanus (enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assay [ELISA] > 0.5 IU/mL). Among children without protective tetanus
antitoxin concentration, all except one had records of >3 doses of
vaccine, and the majority of nonprotective concentrations were categorized
as indeterminate (ELISA = 0.05--0.49 IU/mL) (144). Reasons for the
discrepant findings in these two studies probably relate to different
laboratory methodologies; the study using a hemagglutination assay might
have underestimated the number of children who were protected. Additional
studies using standardized methodologies are needed. Data are likely to
remain limited for countries other than the People's Republic of China,
Russia, and Eastern Europe because of the limited number of adoptees from
other countries.
Physicians and other health-care providers can follow one of multiple
approaches if a question exists regarding whether vaccines administered to
an international adoptee were immunogenic. Repeating the vaccinations is an
acceptable option. Doing so is usually safe and avoids the need to obtain
and interpret serologic tests. If avoiding unnecessary injections is
desired, judicious use of serologic testing might be helpful in determining
which immunizations are needed. This report provides guidance on possible
approaches to evaluation and revaccination for each vaccine recommended
universally for children in the United States (see Table 6
and the following sections).
MMR Vaccine
The simplest approach to resolving concerns regarding MMR immunization
among internationally adopted children is to revaccinate with one or two
doses of MMR vaccine, depending on the child's age. Serious adverse events
after MMR vaccinations are rare (6).
No evidence indicates that administering MMR vaccine increases the risk for
adverse reactions among persons who are already immune to measles, mumps, or
rubella as a result of previous vaccination or natural disease. Doses of
measles-containing vaccine administered before the first birthday should not
be counted as part of the series (6).
Alternatively, serologic testing for immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody to
vaccine viruses indicated on the vaccination record can be considered.
Serologic testing is widely available for measles and rubella IgG antibody.
A child whose record indicates receipt of monovalent measles or
measles-rubella vaccine at age >1 year and who has protective
antibody against measles and rubella should receive a single dose of MMR as
age-appropriate to ensure protection against mumps (and rubella if measles
vaccine alone had been used). If a child whose record indicates receipt of
MMR at age >12 months has a protective concentration of antibody to
measles, no additional vaccination is needed unless required for school
entry.
Hib Vaccine
Serologic correlates of protection for children vaccinated >2 months
previously might be difficult to interpret. Because the number of
vaccinations needed for protection decreases with age and adverse events are
rare (24),
age-appropriate vaccination should be provided. Hib vaccination is not
recommended routinely for children aged >5 years.
Hepatitis B Vaccine
Serologic testing for HBsAg is recommended for international adoptees,
and children determined to be HBsAg-positive should be monitored for the
development of liver disease. Household members of HBsAg-positive children
should be vaccinated. A child whose records indicate receipt of >3
doses of vaccine can be considered protected, and additional doses are not
needed if >1 doses were administered at age >6 months.
Children who received their last hepatitis B vaccine dose at age <6 months
should receive an additional dose at age >6 months. Those who have
received <3 doses should complete the series at the recommended intervals
and ages (Table 1).
Poliovirus Vaccine
The simplest approach is to revaccinate internationally adopted children
with IPV according to the U.S. schedule. Adverse events after IPV are rare (4).
Children appropriately vaccinated with three doses of OPV in economically
developing countries might have suboptimal seroconversion, including to type
3 poliovirus (125). Serologic testing for neutralizing antibody to
poliovirus types 1, 2, and 3 can be obtained commercially and at certain
state health department laboratories. Children with protective titers
against all three types do not need revaccination and should complete the
schedule as age-appropriate. Alternately, because the booster response after
a single dose of IPV is excellent among children who previously received OPV
(3),
a single dose of IPV can be administered initially with serologic testing
performed 1 month later.
DTaP Vaccine
Vaccination providers can revaccinate a child with DTaP vaccine without
regard to recorded doses; however, one concern regarding this approach is
that data indicate increased rates of local adverse reactions after the
fourth and fifth doses of DTP or DTaP (42).
If a revaccination approach is adopted and a severe local reaction occurs,
serologic testing for specific IgG antibody to tetanus and diphtheria toxins
can be measured before administering additional doses. Protective
concentration** indicates that further doses are unnecessary and subsequent
vaccination should occur as age-appropriate. No established serologic
correlates exist for protection against pertussis.
For a child whose record indicates receipt of >3 doses of DTP or
DTaP, serologic testing for specific IgG antibody to both diphtheria and
tetanus toxin before additional doses is a reasonable approach. If a
protective concentration is present, recorded doses can be considered valid,
and the vaccination series should be completed as age-appropriate.
Indeterminate antibody concentration might indicate immunologic memory but
antibody waning; serology can be repeated after a booster dose if the
vaccination provider wishes to avoid revaccination with a complete series.
Alternately, for a child whose records indicate receipt of >3
doses, a single booster dose can be administered, followed by serologic
testing after 1 month for specific IgG antibody to both diphtheria and
tetanus toxins. If a protective concentration is obtained, the recorded
doses can be considered valid and the vaccination series completed as
age-appropriate. Children with indeterminate concentration after a booster
dose should be revaccinated with a complete series.
Varicella Vaccine
Varicella vaccine is not administered in the majority of countries. A
child who lacks a reliable medical history regarding prior varicella disease
should be vaccinated as age-appropriate (8).
Pneumococcal Vaccines
Pneumococcal conjugate and pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccines are not
administered in the majority of countries and should be administered as
age-appropriate or as indicated by the presence of underlying medical
conditions (26,43).
Altered Immunocompetence
ACIP's statement regarding vaccinating immunocompromised persons
summarizes recommendations regarding the efficacy, safety, and use of
specific vaccines and immune globulin preparations for immunocompromised
persons (145).
ACIP statements regarding individual vaccines or immune globulins contain
additional information regarding those concerns.
Severe immunosuppression can be the result of congenital
immunodeficiency, HIV infection, leukemia, lymphoma, generalized malignancy
or therapy with alkylating agents, antimetabolites, radiation, or a high
dose, prolonged course of corticosteroids. The degree to which a person is
immunocompromised should be determined by a physician. Severe complications
have followed vaccination with live-virus vaccines and live bacterial
vaccines among immunocompromised patients (146--153).
These patients should not receive live vaccines except in certain
circumstances that are noted in the following paragraphs. MMR vaccine
viruses are not transmitted to contacts, and transmission of varicella
vaccine virus is rare (6,138).
MMR and varicella vaccines should be administered to susceptible household
and other close contacts of immunocompromised patients when indicated.
Persons with HIV infection are at increased risk for severe complications
if infected with measles. No severe or unusual adverse events have been
reported after measles vaccination among HIV-infected persons who did not
have evidence of severe immunosuppression (154--157). As a result,
MMR vaccination is recommended for all HIV-infected persons who do not have
evidence of severe immunosuppression and for whom measles
vaccination would otherwise be indicated.
Children with HIV infection are at increased risk for complications of
primary varicella and for herpes zoster, compared with immunocompetent
children (138,158).
Limited data among asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic HIV-infected children
(CDC class N1 or A1, age-specific CD4+ lymphocyte percentages of
>25%) indicate that varicella vaccine is immunogenic, effective, and
safe (138,159).
Varicella vaccine should be considered for asymptomatic or mildly
symptomatic HIV-infected children in CDC class N1 or A1 with age-specific
CD4+ T lymphocyte percentages of >25%. Eligible children
should receive two doses of varicella vaccine with a 3-month interval
between doses (138).
HIV-infected persons who are receiving regular doses of IGIV might not
respond to varicella vaccine or MMR or its individual component vaccines
because of the continued presence of passively acquired antibody. However,
because of the potential benefit, measles vaccination should be considered
approximately 2 weeks before the next scheduled dose of IGIV (if not
otherwise contraindicated), although an optimal immune response is unlikely
to occur. Unless serologic testing indicates that specific antibodies have
been produced, vaccination should be repeated (if not otherwise
contraindicated) after the recommended interval (Table 4).
An additional dose of IGIV should be considered for persons on maintenance
IGIV therapy who are exposed to measles >3 weeks after administering
a standard dose (100--400 mg/kg body weight) of IGIV.
Persons with cellular immunodeficiency should not receive varicella
vaccine. However, ACIP recommends that persons with impaired humoral
immunity (e.g., hypogammaglobulinemia or dysgammaglobulinemia) should be
vaccinated (138,160).
Inactivated, recombinant, subunit, polysaccharide, and conjugate vaccines
and toxoids can be administered to all immunocompromised patients, although
response to such vaccines might be suboptimal. If indicated, all inactivated
vaccines are recommended for immunocompromised persons in usual doses and
schedules. In addition, pneumococcal, meningococcal, and Hib vaccines are
recommended specifically for certain groups of immunocompromised patients,
including those with functional or anatomic asplenia (145,161).
Except for influenza vaccine, which should be administered annually (88),
vaccination during chemotherapy or radiation therapy should be avoided
because antibody response is suboptimal. Patients vaccinated while receiving
immunosuppressive therapy or in the 2 weeks before starting therapy should
be considered unimmunized and should be revaccinated >3 months after
therapy is discontinued. Patients with leukemia in remission whose
chemotherapy has been terminated for >3 months can receive live-virus
vaccines.
Corticosteroids
The exact amount of systemically absorbed corticosteroids and the
duration of administration needed to suppress the immune system of an
otherwise immunocompetent person are not well-defined. The majority of
experts agree that corticosteroid therapy usually is not a contraindication
to administering live-virus vaccine when it is short-term (i.e., <2 weeks);
a low to moderate dose; long-term, alternate-day treatment with short-acting
preparations; maintenance physiologic doses (replacement therapy); or
administered topically (skin or eyes) or by intra-articular, bursal, or
tendon injection (145).
Although of theoretical concern, no evidence of increased severity of
reactions to live vaccines has been reported among persons receiving
corticosteroid therapy by aerosol, and such therapy is not a reason to delay
vaccination. The immunosuppressive effects of steroid treatment vary, but
the majority of clinicians consider a dose equivalent to either >2
mg/kg of body weight or a total of 20 mg/day of prednisone or equivalent for
children who weigh >10 kg, when administered for >2 weeks as
sufficiently immunosuppressive to raise concern regarding the safety of
vaccination with live-virus vaccines (84,145).
Corticosteroids used in greater than physiologic doses also can reduce the
immune response to vaccines. Vaccination providers should wait >1
month after discontinuation of therapy before administering a live-virus
vaccine to patients who have received high systemically absorbed doses of
corticosteroids for >2 weeks.
Vaccination of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant Recipients
Hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) is the infusion of
hematopoietic stem cells from a donor into a patient who has received
chemotherapy and often radiation, both of which are usually bone marrow
ablative. HSCT is used to treat a variety of neoplastic diseases,
hematologic disorders, immunodeficiency syndromes, congenital enzyme
deficiencies, and autoimmune disorders. HSCT recipients can receive either
their own cells (i.e., autologous HSCT) or cells from a donor other than the
transplant recipient (i.e., allogeneic HSCT). The source of the transplanted
stem cells can be from either a donor's bone marrow or peripheral blood or
harvested from the umbilical cord of a newborn infant (162).
Antibody titers to vaccine-preventable diseases (e.g., tetanus,
poliovirus, measles, mumps, rubella, and encapsulated bacteria) decline
during the 1--4 years after allogeneic or autologous HSCT if the recipient
is not revaccinated (163--167). HSCT recipients are at increased risk
for certain vaccine-preventable diseases, including those caused by
encapsulated bacteria (i.e., pneumococcal and Hib infections). As a result,
HSCT recipients should be routinely revaccinated after HSCT, regardless of
the source of the transplanted stem cells. Revaccination with inactivated,
recombinant, subunit, polysaccharide, and Hib vaccines should begin 12
months after HSCT (162).
An exception to this recommendation is for influenza vaccine, which should
be administered at >6 months after HSCT and annually for the life of
the recipient thereafter. MMR vaccine should be administered 24 months after
transplantation if the HSCT recipient is presumed to be immunocompetent.
Varicella, meningococcal, and pneumococcal conjugate vaccines are not
recommended for HSCT recipients because of insufficient experience using
these vaccines among HSCT recipients (162).
The household and other close contacts of HSCT recipients and health-care
workers who care for HSCT recipients, should be appropriately vaccinated,
including against influenza, measles, and varicella. Additional details of
vaccination of HSCT recipients and their contacts can be found in a specific
CDC report on this topic (162).
Vaccinating Persons with Bleeding Disorders and Persons Receiving
Anticoagulant Therapy
Persons with bleeding disorders (e.g., hemophilia) and persons receiving
anticoagulant therapy have an increased risk for acquiring hepatitis B and
at least the same risk as the general population of acquiring other
vaccine-preventable diseases. However, because of the risk for hematoma
formation after injections, intramuscular injections are often avoided among
persons with bleeding disorders by using the subcutaneous or intradermal
routes for vaccines that are administered normally by the intramuscular
route. Hepatitis B vaccine administered intramuscularly to 153 persons with
hemophilia by using a 23-gauge needle, followed by steady pressure to the
site for 1--2 minutes, resulted in a 4% bruising rate with no patients
requiring factor supplementation (168). Whether antigens that produce
more local reactions (e.g., pertussis) would produce an equally low rate of
bruising is unknown.
When hepatitis B or any other intramuscular vaccine is indicated for a
patient with a bleeding disorder or a person receiving anticoagulant
therapy, the vaccine should be administered intramuscularly if, in the
opinion of a physician familiar with the patient's bleeding risk, the
vaccine can be administered with reasonable safety by this route. If the
patient receives antihemophilia or similar therapy, intramuscular
vaccinations can be scheduled shortly after such therapy is administered. A
fine needle (<23 gauge) should be used for the vaccination and firm
pressure applied to the site, without rubbing, for >2 minutes. The
patient or family should be instructed concerning the risk for hematoma from
the injection.
Vaccination Records
Consent to Vaccinate
The National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986 (42 U.S.C. § 300aa-26)
requires that all health-care providers in the United States who administer
any vaccine covered by the act§§ must provide a copy of the
relevant, current edition of the vaccine information materials that have
been produced by CDC before administering each dose of the vaccine. The
vaccine information material must be provided to the parent or legal
representative of any child or to any adult to whom the physician or other
health-care provider intends to administer the vaccine. The Act does not
require that a signature be obtained, but documentation of consent is
recommended or required by certain state or local authorities.
Provider Records
Documentation of patient vaccinations helps ensure that persons in need
of a vaccine receive it and that adequately vaccinated patients are not
overimmunized, possibly increasing the risk for local adverse events (e.g.,
tetanus toxoid). Serologic test results for vaccine-preventable diseases
(e.g., those for rubella screening) as well as documented episodes of
adverse events also should be recorded in the permanent medical record of
the vaccine recipient.
Health-care providers who administer vaccines covered by the National
Childhood Vaccine Injury Act are required to ensure that the permanent
medical record of the recipient (or a permanent office log or file)
indicates the date the vaccine was administered, the vaccine manufacturer,
the vaccine lot number, and the name, address, and title of the person
administering the vaccine. Additionally, the provider is required to record
the edition date of the vaccine information materials distributed and the
date those materials were provided. Regarding this Act, the term
health-care provider is defined as any licensed health-care
professional, organization, or institution, whether private or public
(including federal, state, and local departments and agencies), under whose
authority a specified vaccine is administered. ACIP recommends that this
same information be kept for all vaccines, not just for those required by
the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act.
Patients' Personal Records
Official immunization cards have been adopted by every state, territory,
and the District of Columbia to encourage uniformity of records and to
facilitate assessment of immunization status by schools and child care
centers. The records also are key tools in immunization education programs
aimed at increasing parental and patient awareness of the need for vaccines.
A permanent immunization record card should be established for each newborn
infant and maintained by the parent or guardian. In certain states, these
cards are distributed to new mothers before discharge from the hospital.
Using immunization record cards for adolescents and adults also is
encouraged.
Registries
Immunization registries are confidential, population-based, computerized
information systems that collect vaccination data for as many children as
possible within a geographic area. Registries are a critical tool that can
increase and sustain increased vaccination coverage by consolidating
vaccination records of children from multiple providers, generating reminder
and recall vaccination notices for each child, and providing official
vaccination forms and vaccination coverage assessments (169).
A fully operational immunization registry also can prevent duplicate
vaccinations, limit missed appointments, reduce vaccine waste, and reduce
staff time required to produce or locate immunization records or
certificates. The National Vaccine Advisory Committee strongly encourages
development of community- or state-based immunization registry systems and
recommends that vaccination providers participate in these registries
whenever possible (170,171).
A 95% participation of children aged <6 years in fully operational
population-based immunization registries is a national health objective for
2010 (172).
Reporting Adverse Events After
Vaccination
Modern vaccines are safe and effective; however, adverse events have been
reported after administration of all vaccines (82).
These events range from frequent, minor, local reactions to extremely rare,
severe, systemic illness (e.g., encephalopathy). Establishing evidence for
cause-and-effect relationships on the basis of case reports and case series
alone is impossible because temporal association alone does not necessarily
indicate causation. Unless the syndrome that occurs after vaccination is
clinically or pathologically distinctive, more detailed epidemiologic
studies to compare the incidence of the event among vaccinees with the
incidence among unvaccinated persons are often necessary. Reporting adverse
events to public health authorities, including serious events, is a key
stimulus to developing studies to confirm or refute a causal association
with vaccination. More complete information regarding adverse reactions to a
specific vaccine can be found in the ACIP recommendations for that vaccine
and in a specific statement on vaccine adverse reactions (82).
The National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act requires health-care providers
to report selected events occurring after vaccination to the Vaccine Adverse
Event Reporting System (VAERS). Events for which reporting is required
appear in the Vaccine Injury Table.¶¶ Persons other than
health-care workers also can report adverse events to VAERS. Adverse events
other than those that must be reported or that occur after administration of
vaccines not covered by the act, including events that are serious or
unusual, also should be reported to VAERS, even if the physician or other
health-care provider is uncertain they are related causally. VAERS forms and
instructions are available in the FDA Drug Bulletin, by calling the 24-hour
VAERS Hotline at 800-822-7967, or from the VAERS website at
http://www.vaers.org (accessed November
7, 2001).
Vaccine Injury Compensation Program
The National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, established by the
National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act, is a no-fault system in which persons
thought to have suffered an injury or death as a result of administration of
a covered vaccine can seek compensation. The program, which became
operational on October 1, 1988, is intended as an alternative to civil
litigation under the traditional tort system in that negligence need not be
proven. Claims arising from covered vaccines must first be adjudicated
through the program before civil litigation can be pursued.
The program relies on a Vaccine Injury Table listing the vaccines covered
by the program as well as the injuries, disabilities, illnesses, and
conditions (including death) for which compensation might be awarded. The
table defines the time during which the first symptom or substantial
aggravation of an injury must appear after vaccination. Successful claimants
receive a legal presumption of causation if a condition listed in the table
is proven, thus avoiding the need to prove actual causation in an individual
case. Claimants also can prevail for conditions not listed in the table if
they prove causation. Injuries after administration of vaccines not listed
in the legislation authorizing the program are not eligible for compensation
through the program. Additional information is available from the following:
National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program
Health Resources and Services Administration
Parklawn Building, Room 8-46
5600 Fishers Lane
Rockville, MD 20857
Telephone: 800-338-2382 (24-hour recording)
Internet: http://
www.hrsa.gov/bhpr/vicp (accessed November 7, 2001)
Persons wishing to file a claim for vaccine injury should call or write
the following:
U.S. Court of Federal Claims
717 Madison Place, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20005
Telephone: 202-219-9657
Benefit and Risk Communication
Parents, guardians, legal representatives, and adolescent and adult
patients should be informed regarding the benefits and risks of vaccines in
understandable language. Opportunity for questions should be provided before
each vaccination. Discussion of the benefits and risks of vaccination is
sound medical practice and is required by law.
The National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act requires that vaccine
information materials be developed for each vaccine covered by the Act.
These materials, known as Vaccine Information Statements, must be
provided by all public and private vaccination providers each time a vaccine
is administered. Copies of Vaccine Information Statements are available from
state health authorities responsible for immunization, or they can be
obtained from CDC's National Immunization Program website at
http://www.cdc.gov/nip (accessed
November 7, 2001). Translations of Vaccine Information Statements into
languages other than English are available from certain state immunization
programs and from the Immunization Action Coalition website at
http://www.immunize.org (accessed
November 7, 2001).
Health-care providers should anticipate that certain parents or patients
will question the need for or safety of vaccination, refuse certain
vaccines, or even reject all vaccinations. A limited number of persons might
have religious or personal objections to vaccinations. Others wish to enter
into a dialogue regarding the risks and benefits of certain vaccines. Having
a basic understanding of how patients view vaccine risk and developing
effective approaches in dealing with vaccine safety concerns when they arise
is imperative for vaccination providers.
Each person understands and reacts to vaccine information on the basis of
different factors, including prior experience, education, personal values,
method of data presentation, perceptions of the risk for disease, perceived
ability to control those risks, and their risk preference. Increasingly,
through the media and nonauthoritative Internet sites, decisions regarding
risk are based on inaccurate information. Only through direct dialogue with
parents and by using available resources, health-care professionals can
prevent acceptance of media reports and information from nonauthoritative
Internet sites as scientific fact.
When a parent or patient initiates discussion regarding a vaccine
controversy, the health-care professional should discuss the specific
concerns and provide factual information, using language that is
appropriate. Effective, empathetic vaccine risk communication is essential
in responding to misinformation and concerns, although recognizing that for
certain persons, risk assessment and decision-making is difficult and
confusing. Certain vaccines might be acceptable to the resistant parent.
Their concerns should then be addressed in the context of this information,
using the Vaccine Information Statements and offering other resource
materials (e.g., information available on the National Immunization Program
website).
Although a limited number of providers might choose to exclude from their
practice those patients who question or refuse vaccination, the more
effective public health strategy is to identify common ground and discuss
measures that need to be followed if the patient's decision is to defer
vaccination. Health-care providers can reinforce key points regarding each
vaccine, including safety, and emphasize risks encountered by unimmunized
children. Parents should be advised of state laws pertaining to school or
child care entry, which might require that unimmunized children stay home
from school during outbreaks. Documentation of these discussions in the
patient's record, including the refusal to receive certain vaccines (i.e.,
informed refusal), might reduce any potential liability if a
vaccine-preventable disease occurs in the unimmunized patient.
Vaccination Programs
The best way to reduce vaccine-preventable diseases is to have a highly
immune population. Universal vaccination is a critical part of quality
health care and should be accomplished through routine and intensive
vaccination programs implemented in physicians' offices and in public health
clinics. Programs should be established and maintained in all communities to
ensure vaccination of all children at the recommended age. In addition,
appropriate vaccinations should be available for all adolescents and adults.
Physicians and other pediatric vaccination providers should adhere to the
standards for child and adolescent immunization practices (1).
These standards define appropriate vaccination practices for both the public
and private sectors. The standards provide guidance on practices that will
result in eliminating barriers to vaccination. These include practices aimed
at eliminating unnecessary prerequisites for receiving vaccinations,
eliminating missed opportunities to vaccinate, improving procedures to
assess vaccination needs, enhancing knowledge regarding vaccinations among
parents and providers, and improving the management and reporting of adverse
events. Additionally, the standards address the importance of recall and
reminder systems and using assessments to monitor clinic or office
vaccination coverage levels among patients.
Standards of practice also have been published to increase vaccination
coverage among adults (2).
Persons aged >65 years and all adults with medical conditions that
place them at risk for pneumococcal disease should receive >1 doses
of pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine. All persons aged >50 years
and those with medical conditions that increase the risk for complications
from influenza should receive annual influenza vaccination. All adults
should complete a primary series of tetanus and diphtheria toxoids and
receive a booster dose every 10 years. Adult vaccination programs also
should provide MMR and varicella vaccines whenever possible to anyone
susceptible to measles, mumps, rubella, or varicella. Persons born after
1956 who are attending college (or other posthigh school educational
institutions), who are employed in environments that place them at increased
risk for measles transmission (e.g., health-care facilities), or who are
traveling to areas with endemic measles, should have documentation of having
received two doses of MMR on or after their first birthday or other evidence
of immunity (6,173).
All other adults born after 1956 should have documentation of >1
doses of MMR vaccine on or after their first birthday or have other evidence
of immunity. No evidence indicates that administering MMR vaccine increases
the risk for adverse reactions among persons who are already immune to
measles, mumps, or rubella as a result of previous vaccination or disease.
Widespread use of hepatitis B vaccine is encouraged for all persons who
might be at increased risk (e.g., adolescents and adults who are either in a
group at high risk or reside in areas with increased rates of injection-drug
use, teenage pregnancy, or sexually transmitted disease).
Every visit to a physician or other health-care provider can be an
opportunity to update a patient's immunization status with needed
vaccinations. Official health agencies should take necessary steps,
including developing and enforcing school immunization requirements, to
ensure that students at all grade levels (including college) and those in
child care centers are protected against vaccine-preventable diseases.
Agencies also should encourage institutions (e.g., hospitals and long-term
care facilities) to adopt policies regarding the appropriate vaccination of
patients, residents, and employees (173).
Dates of vaccination (day, month, and year) should be recorded on
institutional immunization records (e.g., those kept in schools and child
care centers). This record will facilitate assessments that a primary
vaccination series has been completed according to an appropriate schedule
and that needed booster doses have been administered at the appropriate
time.
The independent, nonfederal Task Force on Community Preventive Services
(the Task Force) gives public health decision-makers recommendations on
population-based interventions to promote health and prevent disease,
injury, disability, and premature death. The recommendations are based on
systematic reviews of the scientific literature regarding effectiveness and
cost-effectiveness of these interventions. In addition, the Task Force
identifies critical information regarding the other effects of these
interventions, as well as the applicability to specific populations and
settings and the potential barriers to implementation. This information is
available through the Internet at
http://www.thecommunityguide.org (accessed November 7, 2001).
Beginning in 1996, the Task Force systematically reviewed published
evidence on the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of population-based
interventions to increase coverage of vaccines recommended for routine use
among children, adolescents, and adults. A total of 197 articles were
identified that evaluated a relevant intervention, met inclusion criteria,
and were published during 1980--1997. Reviews of 17 specific interventions
were published in 1999 (174--176). Using the results of their review,
the Task Force made recommendations regarding the use of these interventions
(177). A number of interventions were identified and recommended on
the basis of published evidence. The interventions and the recommendations
are summarized in this report (Table 7).
Vaccine Information Sources
In addition to these general recommendations, other sources are available
that contain specific and updated vaccine information.
National Immunization Information Hotline
The National Immunization Information Hotline is supported by CDC's
National Immunization Program and provides vaccination information for
health-care providers and the public, 8:00 am--11:00 pm, Monday--Friday:
Telephone (English): 800-232-2522
Telephone (Spanish): 800-232-0233
Telephone (TTY): 800-243-7889
Internet: http://www.ashastd.org
(accessed November 7, 2001)
CDC's National Immunization Program
CDC's National Immunization Program website provides direct access to
immunization recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices (ACIP), vaccination schedules, vaccine safety information,
publications, provider education and training, and links to other
immunization-related websites. It is located at
http://www.cdc.gov/nip (accessed
November 7, 2001).
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report
ACIP recommendations regarding vaccine use, statements of vaccine policy
as they are developed, and reports of specific disease activity are
published by CDC in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR)
series. Electronic subscriptions are free and available at
http://www.cdc.gov/subscribe.html (accessed November 7, 2001). Printed
subscriptions are available at
Superintendent of Documents
U.S. Government Printing Office
Washington, D.C. 20402-9235
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
Every 3 years, AAP issues the Red Book: Report of the Committee on
Infectious Diseases, which contains a composite summary of AAP
recommendations concerning infectious diseases and immunizations for
infants, children, and adolescents.
Telephone: 888-227-1770
Internet: http://www.aap.org (accessed
November 7, 2001)
American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP)
Information from the professional organization of family physicians is
available at http://www.aafp.org (accessed
November 7, 2001).
Immunization Action Coalition
This source provides extensive free provider and patient information,
including translations of Vaccine Information Statements into multiple
languages. The Internet address is
http://www.immunize.org (accessed November 7, 2001).
National Network for Immunization Information
This information source is provided by the Infectious Diseases Society of
America, Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society, AAP, American Nurses
Association, and other professional organizations. It provides objective,
science-based information regarding vaccines for the public and providers.
The Internet site is
http://www.immunizationinfo.org (accessed November 7, 2001).
Vaccine Education Center
Located at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, this source provides
patient and provider information. The Internet address is
http://www.vaccine.chop.edu
(accessed November 7, 2001).
Institute for Vaccine Safety
Located at Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health, this source
provides information regarding vaccine safety concerns and objective and
timely information to health-care providers and parents. It is available at
http://www.vaccinesafety.edu
(accessed November 7, 2001).
National Partnership for Immunization
This national organization encourages greater acceptance and use of
vaccinations for all ages through partnerships with public and private
organizations. Their Internet address is
http://www.partnersforimmunization.org (accessed November 7, 2001).
State and Local Health Departments
State and local health departments provide technical advice through
hotlines, electronic mail, and Internet sites, including printed information
regarding vaccines and immunization schedules, posters, and other
educational materials.
Acknowledgments
The members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices are
grateful for the contributions of Margaret Hostetter, M.D., Yale Child
Health Research Center; Mary Staat, M.D., Children's Hospital Medical Center
of Cincinnati; Deborah Wexler, M.D., Immunization Action Coalition; and John
Grabenstein, Ph.D., U.S. Army Medical Command.
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* During measles outbreaks, if cases are occurring among infants aged <12
months, measles vaccination of infants as young as 6 months can be
undertaken as an outbreak control measure. However, doses administered at
ages <12 months should not be counted as part of the series (Source:
CDC. Measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine use and strategies for elimination
of measles, rubella, and congenital rubella syndrome and control of mumps:
recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices [ACIP].
MMWR 1998;47[No. RR-8]:157).
In certain situations, local or state requirements might
mandate that doses of selected vaccines be administered on or after specific
ages. For example, a school entry requirement might not accept a dose of MMR
or varicella vaccine administered before the child's first birthday. ACIP
recommends that physicians and other health-care providers comply with local
or state vaccination requirements when scheduling and administering
vaccines.
§ The exception is the two-dose hepatitis B vaccination series
for adolescents aged 1115 years. Only Recombivax HB® (Merck
Vaccine Division) should be used in this schedule. Engerix-B® is
not approved by FDA for this schedule.
¶ Internet sites with device listings are identified for
information purposes only. CDC, the U.S. Public Health Service, and the
Department of Health and Human Services do not endorse any specific device
or imply that the devices listed would all satisfy the needle-stick
prevention regulations.
** Toxin neutralization testing is reliable but not readily available.
Enzyme immunoassay tests are the most readily available, although passive
hemagglutination is available in certain areas. Physicians should contact
the laboratory performing the test for interpretive standards and
limitations. Protective concentrations for diphtheria are defined as >0.1
IU/mL and for tetanus as >0.10.2 IU/mL.
As defined by a low age-specific total CD4+ T
lymphocyte count or a low CD4+ T lymphocyte count as a percentage
of total lymphocytes. ACIP recommendations for using MMR vaccine contain
additional details regarding the criteria for severe immunosuppression in
persons with HIV infection (Source: CDC. Measles, mumps, and rubella
vaccine use and strategies for elimination of measles, rubella, and
congenital rubella syndrome and control of mumps: recommendations of the
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices [ACIP]. MMWR 1998;47[No.
RR-8]:157).
§§ As of January 2002, vaccines covered by the act include
diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, measles, mumps, rubella, poliovirus,
hepatitis B, Hib, varicella, and pneumococcal conjugate.
¶¶ The Vaccine Injury Table can be obtained from the Vaccine
Injury Compensation Program Internet site at <http://www.hrsa.dhhs.gov/bhpr/vicp/table.htm>
(accessed November 7, 2001).
*** Standards for pediatric, adolescent, and adult immunization practices
are being revised and will be posted on CDC's National Immunization Program
Interne site (http://www.cdc.gov/nip;
accessed November 7, 2001) as soon as the updates are available.
Abbreviations Used in This
Publication
- AAFP
- American Academy of Family Physicians
- AAP
- American Academy of Pediatrics
- ACIP
- Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
- DT
- pediatric diphtheria-tetanus toxoid
- DTaP
- diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis vaccine
- DTP
- diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and whole-cell pertussis vaccine
- EIA/ELISA
- enzyme immunoassay
- FDA
- Food and Drug Administration
- GBS
- Guillain-Barré syndrome
- HBIG
- hepatitis B immune globulin
- HbOC
- diphtheria CRM197 (CRM, cross-reactive material) protein
conjugate
- HBsAg
- hepatitis B surface antigen
- Hib
- Haemophilus influenzae type b
- HIV
- human immunodeficiency virus
- HSCT
- hematopoietic stem cell transplant
- IgG
- immunoglobulin G
- IGIV
- intravenous immune globulin
- IPV
- inactivated poliovirus vaccine
- JIs
- jet injectors
- MMR
- measles, mumps, rubella vaccine
- OPV
- oral poliovirus vaccine
- OSHA
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration
- PCV
- pneumococcal conjugate vaccine
- PPD
- purified protein derivative
- PRP-OMP
- polyribosylribitol phosphate-meningococcal outer membrane protein
- PRP-T
- PRP-tetanus
- PPV
- pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine
- Td
- adult tetanus-diphtheria toxoid
- VAERS
- Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System
- VAPP
- vaccine-associated paralytic polio
Definitions Used in This Report
Adverse event. An untoward event that occurs after a vaccination
that might be caused by the vaccine product or vaccination process. It
includes events that are 1) vaccine-induced: caused by the intrinsic
characteristic of the vaccine preparation and the individual response of the
vaccinee; these events would not have occurred without vaccination (e.g.,
vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis); 2) vaccine-potentiated: would
have occurred anyway, but were precipitated by the vaccination (e.g., first
febrile seizure in a predisposed child); 3) programmatic error: caused by
technical errors in vaccine preparation, handling, or administration; 4)
coincidental: associated temporally with vaccination by chance or caused by
underlying illness. Special studies are needed to determine if an adverse
event is a reaction or the result of another cause (Sources: Chen RT.
Special methodological issues in pharmacoepidemiology studies of vaccine
safety. In: Strom BL, ed. Pharmacoepidemiology. 3rd ed. Sussex,
England: John Wiley & Sons, 2000:707--32; and Fenichel GM, Lane DA,
Livengood JR, Horwitz SJ, Menkes JH, Schwartz JF. Adverse events following
immunization: assessing probability of causation. Pediatr Neurol
1989;5:287--90).
Adverse reaction. An undesirable medical condition that has been
demonstrated to be caused by a vaccine. Evidence for the causal relationship
is usually obtained through randomized clinical trials, controlled
epidemiologic studies, isolation of the vaccine strain from the pathogenic
site, or recurrence of the condition with repeated vaccination (i.e.,
rechallenge); synonyms include side effect and adverse effect).
Immunobiologic. Antigenic substances (e.g., vaccines and toxoids)
or antibody-containing preparations (e.g., globulins and antitoxins) from
human or animal donors. These products are used for active or passive
immunization or therapy. The following are examples of immunobiologics:
Vaccine. A suspension of live (usually attenuated) or
inactivated microorganisms (e.g., bacteria or viruses) or fractions
thereof administered to induce immunity and prevent infectious disease or
its sequelae. Some vaccines contain highly defined antigens (e.g., the
polysaccharide of Haemophilus influenzae type b or the surface
antigen of hepatitis B); others have antigens that are complex or
incompletely defined (e.g., killed Bordetella pertussis or live
attenuated viruses).
Toxoid. A modified bacterial toxin that has been made nontoxic,
but retains the ability to stimulate the formation of antibodies to the
toxin.
Immune globulin. A sterile solution containing antibodies, which
are usually obtained from human blood. It is obtained by cold ethanol
fractionation of large pools of blood plasma and contains 15%--18%
protein. Intended for intramuscular administration, immune globulin is
primarily indicated for routine maintenance of immunity among certain
immunodeficient persons and for passive protection against measles and
hepatitis A.
Intravenous immune globulin. A product derived from blood plasma
from a donor pool similar to the immune globulin pool, but prepared so
that it is suitable for intravenous use. Intravenous immune globulin is
used primarily for replacement therapy in primary antibody-deficiency
disorders, for treatment of Kawasaki disease, immune thrombocytopenic
purpura, hypogammaglobulinemia in chronic lymphocytic leukemia, and
certain cases of human immunodeficiency virus infection (Table
2).
Hyperimmune globulin (specific). Special preparations obtained
from blood plasma from donor pools preselected for a high antibody content
against a specific antigen (e.g., hepatitis B immune globulin, varicella-zoster
immune globulin, rabies immune globulin, tetanus immune globulin, vaccinia
immune globulin, cytomegalovirus immune globulin, respiratory syncytial
virus immune globulin, botulism immune globulin).
Monoclonal antibody. An antibody product prepared from a single
lymphocyte clone, which contains only antibody against a single
microorganism.
Antitoxin. A solution of antibodies against a toxin. Antitoxin
can be derived from either human (e.g., tetanus antitoxin) or animal
(usually equine) sources (e.g., diphtheria and botulism antitoxin).
Antitoxins are used to confer passive immunity and for treatment.
Vaccination and Immunization. The terms vaccine and
vaccination are derived from vacca, the Latin term for cow.
Vaccine was the term used by Edward Jenner to describe material used
(i.e., cowpox virus) to produce immunity to smallpox. The term
vaccination was used by Louis Pasteur in the 19th century to
include the physical act of administering any vaccine or toxoid.
Immunization is a more inclusive term, denoting the process of inducing
or providing immunity by administering an immunobiologic. Immunization can
be active or passive. Active immunization is the production of
antibody or other immune responses through administration of a vaccine or
toxoid. Passive immunization means the provision of temporary
immunity by the administration of preformed antibodies. Four types of
immunobiologics are administered for passive immunization: 1) pooled human
immune globulin or intravenous immune globulin, 2) hyperimmune globulin
(specific) preparations, 3) monoclonal antibody preparations, and 4)
antitoxins from nonhuman sources. Although persons often use the terms
vaccination and immunization interchangeably in reference to
active immunization, the terms are not synonymous because the administration
of an immunobiologic cannot be equated automatically with development of
adequate immunity.
Table 1

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Table 2

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Table 3

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Table 4

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Table 5


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Table 6

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Table 7

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Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
Membership List, June 2001
Chairman: John F. Modlin, M.D., Professor of Pediatrics and
Medicine, Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon, New Hampshire.
Executive Secretary: Dixie E. Snider, Jr., M.D., Associate
Director for Science, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta,
Georgia.
Members: Dennis A. Brooks, M.D., Johnson Medical Center,
Baltimore, Maryland; Richard D. Clover, M.D., University of Louisville
School of Medicine, Louisville, Kentucky; Jaime Deseda-Tous, M.D., San Jorge
Children's Hospital, San Juan, Puerto Rico; Charles M. Helms, M.D., Ph.D.,
University of Iowa Hospital and Clinics, Iowa City, Iowa ; David R. Johnson,
M.D., Michigan Department of Community Health, Lansing, Michigan ; Myron J.
Levin, M.D., University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, Colorado;
Paul A. Offit, M.D., Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania; Margaret B. Rennels, M.D., University of Maryland School of
Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland; Natalie J. Smith, M.D., California Department
of Health Services, Berkeley, California; Lucy S. Tompkins, M.D., Ph.D.,
Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, California; Bonnie M. Word,
M.D., Monmouth Junction, New Jersey.
Ex-Officio Members: James Cheek, M.D., Indian Health Service,
Albuquerque, New Mexico; Carole Heilman, M.D., National Institutes of
Health, Bethesda, Maryland; Karen Midthun, M.D., Food and Drug
Administration, Bethesda, Maryland; Martin G. Myers, M.D., National Vaccine
Program Office, Atlanta, Georgia; Kristin Lee Nichol, M.D., VA Medical
Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota; Col. Benedict M. Didiega, M.D., Department
of Defense, Falls Church, Virginia; Geoffrey S. Evans, M.D., Health
Resources and Services Administration, Rockville, Maryland; T. Randolph
Graydon, Health Care Financing Administration, Baltimore, Maryland.
Liaison Representatives: American Academy of Family Physicians,
Martin Mahoney, M.D., Ph.D., Clarence, New York; Richard Zimmerman, M.D.,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; American Academy of Pediatrics, Jon Abramson,
M.D., Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Gary Overturf, M.D., Albuquerque, New
Mexico; American Association of Health Plans, Eric K. France, M.D., Denver,
Colorado; American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Stanley A.
Gall, M.D., Louisville, Kentucky; American College of Physicians, Kathleen
M. Neuzil, M.D., Seattle, Washington; American Hospital Association, William
Schaffner, M.D., Nashville, Tennessee; American Medical Association, H.
David Wilson, M.D., Grand Forks, North Dakota; Association of Teachers of
Preventive Medicine, W. Paul McKinney, M.D. Louisville, Kentucky; Canadian
National Advisory Committee on Immunization, Victor Marchessault, M.D.,
Cumberland, Ontario, Canada; Hospital Infection Control Practices Advisory
Committee, Jane D. Siegel, M.D., Dallas, Texas; Infectious Diseases Society
of America, Samuel L. Katz, M.D., Durham, North Carolina; London Department
of Health, David M. Salisbury, M.D., London, United Kingdom; National
Immunization Council and Child Health Program, Mexico, Jose Ignacio Santos,
M.D., Mexico City, Mexico; National Medical Association, Rudolph E. Jackson,
M.D., Atlanta, Georgia; National Vaccine Advisory Committee, Georges Peter,
M.D., Providence, Rhode Island; Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of
America, Kevin Reilly, Radnor, Pennsylvania.
Members of the General Recommendations on Immunization
Working Group
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), Lucy Tompkins, M.D.;
Chinh Le, M.D.; Richard Clover, M.D.; Natalie Smith, M.D. ACIP Liaison and
Ex-Officio Members, David H. Trump, M.D., Office of the Assistant Secretary
of Defense (Health Affairs); Pierce Gardner, M.D., American College of
Physicians; Georges Peter, M.D., National Vaccine Advisory Committee; Victor
Marchessault, M.D., Canadian National Advisory Committee on Immunization;
Goeffrey Evans, M.D., Health Resources and Services Administration; Richard
Zimmerman, M.D., American Academy of Family Physicians; Larry Pickering,
M.D., American Academy of Pediatrics; CDC staff member, William L. Atkinson,
M.D.; other members and consultants, Margaret Hostetter, M.D., Yale Child
Health Research Center; Mary Staat, M.D., Children's Hospital Medical Center
of Cincinnati; Deborah Wexler, M.D., Immunization Action Coalition; John
Grabenstein, Ph.D., U.S. Army Medical Command; Thomas Vernon, M.D., Merck
Vaccine Division; and Fredrick Ruben, M.D., Aventis-Pasteur.
Use of trade names and commercial sources is for
identification only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services.
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