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Vaccinating Children For Flu May Help Prevent Transmission
Protect Those Who Are Not Vaccinated
CHICAGO—Immunizing children and adolescents with
inactivated influenza vaccine resulted in reduced rates of influenza in their
community compared to a similar community in which children did not receive the
vaccine, suggesting that vaccinating children may help prevent transmission of
the virus and offer protection for unimmunized community residents, according to
a study in the March 10 issue of JAMA.
Influenza is a major cause of illness and death, resulting
in an estimated 200,000 hospitalizations and 36,000 deaths annually in the
United States alone. "Current vaccine policy focuses on immunizing those at high
risk of complications of influenza. As a component of a broader policy to
prevent the spread of influenza and reduce its complications, using immunization
to interrupt community-wide transmission of influenza may be effective for
protecting the entire population, including those at high risk," the authors
write. They add that children and adolescents appear to play an important role
in the transmission of influenza, and that selective vaccination against
influenza among this group may interrupt virus transmission and protect those
not vaccinated.
Mark Loeb, M.D., M.Sc., of McMaster University, Hamilton,
Ontario, Canada, and colleagues assessed whether vaccinating children and
adolescents with inactivated influenza vaccine could prevent influenza in other
community members. Because randomizing entire communities to test the indirect
benefit of vaccinating children and adolescents against influenza is not
feasible in most settings, the researchers conducted their study among Hutterite
(of the Anabaptist faith) colonies, which are rural communities found mostly in
western Canada. "These tightly knit communities resemble extended families but
are composed of single families each residing in their own house, where children
and adolescents between the ages of 3 years and 15 years attend school.
Approximately 60 to 120 people reside on each colony," the authors write.
This trial included 947 Canadian children and adolescents
ages 3 to 15 years who received study vaccine and 2,326 community members who
did not receive the study vaccine in 49 Hutterite colonies in Alberta,
Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. Follow-up began in December 2008 and ended in June
2009. Children were randomly assigned according to community to receive standard
dosing of either inactivated trivalent influenza vaccine or hepatitis A vaccine,
which was used as a control.
The average vaccine coverage among healthy children of
clusters assigned to the influenza vaccine was 83 percent, which was similar to
the average vaccine coverage among colonies assigned to hepatitis A vaccine (79
percent). Laboratory-confirmed influenza was detected in 119 nonrecipients: 39
(3.1 percent) in the colonies assigned to influenza immunization and 80 (7.6
percent) in colonies assigned to hepatitis A. The level of indirect vaccine
protective effectiveness was 61 percent.
Among all study participants (those who were and those who
were not vaccinated), 80 of 1,773 (4.5 percent) in the influenza vaccine
colonies and 159 of 1,500 (10.6 percent) in the hepatitis A vaccine colonies had
confirmed influenza illness for an overall protective effectiveness of 59
percent. No serious vaccine adverse events were observed.
"Considering for instance the rapid spread of influenza
A(H1N1) in the 2009 pandemic, understanding whether influenza transmission can
be prevented or reduced by immunizing children is of high priority so that
groups such as pregnant women and aboriginal populations who are at high risk of
complications may potentially be indirectly protected," the authors write.
"Our findings offer experimental proof to support selective
influenza immunization of school aged children with inactivated influenza
vaccine to interrupt influenza transmission. Particularly, if there are
constraints in quantity and delivery of vaccine, it may be advantageous to
selectively immunize children in order to reduce community transmission of
influenza."
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