Guest guest Posted March 12, 2006 Report Share Posted March 12, 2006 http://www.redflagsdaily.com/yazbak/2006_mar01.php Dr. Yazbak, a pediatrician, now devotes his time to the research of autoimmune regressive autism and vaccine injury. Vaccine Tales By Red Flags Columnist, F. Yazbak, MD, FAAP (tlautstudy@...) “The 2004-2005 mumps epidemic in the U.K. did not result from the decrease in MMR vaccination coverage in recent years, but rather from gaps in eligibility of certain cohorts.” — MMWR. Feb. 24, 2006 “Small fold increases were observed for measles, mumps and rubella antibody titers. In contrast, substantial boosts in varicella antibody titers were observed among recipients of a second dose of varicella vaccine, administered as ProQuad or Varivax.” — PEDIATRICS. February 2006 “Although some persons who develop normal antibody titers in response to a single dose of MMR vaccine will develop higher antibody titers to the three component vaccines when administered a second dose of vaccine, these increased antibody levels typically do not persist.” — MMWR. May 22, 1998 “Children and adolescents who have received the varicella (chicken pox) vaccine and contract varicella are about half as contagious as those who have not been vaccinated.” — JAMA. August 2004 In an August 2005 Red Flags’ column, I commented on a mumps outbreak in the United Kingdom and how the Department of Health and the press suggested, as usual, that somehow it was caused by researcher Wakefield’s 1998 Lancet publication, in which he suggested that more investigation was indicated into the role of the MMR vaccine, if any, in regressive autism. The majority of cases in the outbreak were in adolescents and young adults who were born before the introduction in 1988 of the MMR II vaccine in the U.K. Although the single measles and rubella vaccine had been available and widely used in the U.K. before the advent of MMR II, the monovalent mumps vaccine had not. That’s because both the British Medical Association and the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain had decreed that there was little indication for its use until 1988 and the National MMR Campaign, when it suddenly became essential. (1) The Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) of Feb. 24, 2006 was exclusively devoted to the recent U.K. mumps epidemic. “During 2004-2005, the United Kingdom experienced a nationwide epidemic of mumps, which peaked during 2005, when 56,390 notified cases were reported in England and Wales. The majority of confirmed cases during 2004-2005 were in persons aged 15-24 years, most of whom had not been eligible for routine mumps vaccination. Mumps usually is a self-limited viral disease that appears as parotitis.” This report also mentioned that “among all mumps patients during 2004, approximately 3.3 percent were reported as having received two doses of measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine, and another 30.1 percent had received one dose of MMR.” (2) The report was authored, interestingly, by a British epidemiologist from the immunization department of the Health Protection Agency Centre for Infections in London, England. The unsigned editorial comment, in all likelihood by an American epidemiologist, stated, “The 2004-2005 mumps epidemic in the U.K. did not result from the decrease in MMR vaccination coverage in recent years, but rather from gaps in eligibility of certain cohorts, which has been evident during the epidemic by the age breakdown among patients with confirmed cases; mumps occurred predominantly in older teens and young adults, with the highest attack rate occurring in those born during 1983-1986. Persons born before September 1987 generally were not eligible for any routine mumps vaccination, although some might have received one dose of MMR upon school entry as part of a catch-up campaign after October 1988 that targeted children who missed their measles vaccination. Persons born before 1982 are more likely to have been exposed to mumps infection when it was still a common childhood disease. Only 2.4 percent of confirmed cases in 2004 occurred in persons who would have been eligible for two doses of MMR routinely.” So apparently, Wakefield did not do it. I have to say that I was somewhat surprised at the CDC devoting an entire issue of MMWR to mumps in England, when the U.S. and the whole world are faced with possible annihilation by the may-be-may-be-not bird flu pandemic. Investigating further, I found out that, in fact, the British mumps outbreak had touched the U.S., ever so slightly. On Feb. 23, 2006, the Children’s National Medical Center reprinted a Reuters report about a mini outbreak of mumps in New York State titled “Mumps outbreak at camp among immunized children.” (3) “In 2005, an outbreak of mumps occurred in a New York summer camp despite the fact that all of the children involved had adequate vaccination coverage…. The camp, which had 541 staff members and campers, was in session between June 28 and August 18. Thirty-one cases of mumps were identified, for a 5.7 percent attack rate … the first case was in a 20-year-old unvaccinated man who arrived from the U.K., where a mumps epidemic was ongoing, to work as a counselor at the camp.” This counselor’s symptoms started on June 30. “Between July 15 and July 23, 25 more cases of swollen salivary glands were identified, but no diagnoses of mumps were made until July 24. Twelve cases were among campers between 10 and 15 years old, all of whom had been vaccinated with two doses of measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine after their first birthday. The 19 cases among staff members included nine individuals from the U.K., five from the U.S., three from Australia, and two from Germany. Vaccination was documented for only eight of those affected.” As expected, the Sullivan County Health Department recommended that “camp counselors be vaccinated against vaccine-preventable diseases such as mumps” apparently to avoid infecting any American children who have received two doses of MMR. * * * * The February 2006 issue of PEDIATRICS contained an interesting article by K.S. Reisenger and others describing the findings of a research group in Pittsburgh investigating the use of ProQuad in 4- to 6-year-old healthy children vaccinated previously with MMR II and Varivax. (4) For the sake of brevity, only Med Line results and conclusions are quoted: “Results: ProQuad was generally well tolerated. Similarity (noninferiority) was demonstrated in postvaccination antibody responses to measles, mumps and rubella between recipients of ProQuad and all recipients of MMR II and in responses to varicella between recipients of ProQuad and recipients of Varivax. Postvaccination seropositivity rates for antibodies against all four viruses were nearly 100 percent in all three groups. Small fold increases were observed for measles, mumps and rubella antibody titers. In contrast, substantial boosts in varicella antibody titers were observed among recipients of a second dose of varicella vaccine, administered as ProQuad or Varivax. Conclusions: ProQuad may be used in place of a second dose of MMR II or second doses of MMR II and Varivax for 4- to 6-year-old children.” The important statement is obviously, “Small fold increases were observed for measles, mumps and rubella antibody titers. In contrast, substantial boosts in varicella antibody titers were observed among recipients of a second dose of varicella vaccine.” I interpret this to mean: 1. The administered combination vaccine did not much improve the already existing vaccine immunity against measles, mumps and rubella because they were already very close to 100 percent. 2. The vaccine-acquired immunity that followed the first varicella vaccination administered at age 12 months had substantially decreased by the age of four. In 1995, when the chicken pox vaccine was released, Philip Krause, MD, senior research investigator in the Food and Drug Administration's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research was quoted as saying, " Over the period of time it's been looked at carefully, which is about five years, we're not able to find evidence for substantial waning in immunity. " (5) That was obviously the statement that was repeated to doctors by their professional associations and to parents by the lay press and the 24-hour television news channels. The next sentence in Krause’s statement was rarely stressed: " It's complicated to determine how long immunity lasts because right now, people who are vaccinated are exposed to children who have [naturally acquired] chicken pox and they presumably are getting a booster effect from those repeated exposures…. Longer is more difficult to tell. The only way to sort that out is going to be to see what happens after the vaccine is introduced. " We obviously now know that in no time, the U.S. immunity to chicken pox was compromised by the very “success” of the vaccination campaign. When wild chicken pox disappeared, so did its boosting effect on immunity. It is, therefore, strange that currently the CDC can really believe that the Varivax vaccine, whether alone or in combination with MMR, will provide longer lasting immunity at the age of five than it did at age one. It should be noted that although pediatricians, school authorities and parents have always referred to the second dose of MMR (recommended before school) as the “booster,” the CDC has never claimed that it was, indeed, a “booster.” Because approximately five percent of children who receive only one dose of MMR vaccine fail to develop immunity to measles, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommended that all states implement a requirement that every child entering school receive two doses of MMR vaccine. “The second dose of MMR vaccine is recommended when children are aged 4-6 years…. Evidence now indicates that a) the major benefit of administering the second dose is a reduction in the proportion of persons who remain susceptible because of primary vaccine failure, waning immunity is not a major cause of vaccine failure and has little influence on measles transmission, and c) revaccination of children who have low levels of measles antibody produces only a transient rise in antibody levels.” (6) Just for clarification, the CDC stated in 1998 it had evidence that: 1. The second dose of MMR only reduces the number of children, approximately five percent, who remained susceptible because their primary vaccination failed. 2. Waning immunity has little influence on measles transmission. 3. Revaccination only produces a transient rise in antibody levels. The CDC added, “Almost all persons who do not respond to the measles component of the first dose of MMR vaccine will respond to the second dose…. Few data regarding the immune response to the rubella and mumps components of a second dose of MMR vaccine are available, but most persons who do not respond to the rubella or mumps components of the first dose would be expected to respond to the second. The second dose is not generally considered a booster dose because a primary immune response to the first dose provides long-term protection. Although some persons who develop normal antibody titers in response to a single dose of MMR vaccine will develop higher antibody titers to the three component vaccines when administered a second dose of vaccine, these increased antibody levels typically do not persist.” (6) * * * * It is now clear that the national chicken pox vaccination program has increased the incidence of shingles in adults and that a vaccine for shingles is being tested and is due to be released soon. There was much celebration when the chicken pox vaccination was added to the recommended pediatric schedule in 1995. Innocent children were going to stop “dying” from that dangerous childhood disease and even the U.S. economy was going to recover, as mothers went to work instead of staying home for a few days to comfort their itching children and give them oatmeal baths. In 2004, a CDC study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) offered some insight into how “effective” the conquest of chicken pox had been. The objectives of the study were to describe secondary attack rates of chicken pox “within households according to disease history and vaccination status of the primary case and household contacts and to estimate varicella vaccine effectiveness.” The population-based, active varicella surveillance project was carried out in a community of approximately 320,000 in Los Angeles County, California, during 1997 and 2001. There were 6,316 reported chicken pox cases in all. Among children and adolescents aged 1 to 14 years, secondary attack rates varied according to age and by disease and vaccination status of the primary case and exposed household contacts. Among contacts aged 1 to 14 years exposed to unvaccinated cases, the secondary attack rate was 71.5 percent if they were unvaccinated and 15.1 percent if they were vaccinated. Overall, vaccinated cases were half as contagious as unvaccinated cases. However, vaccinated cases with 50 lesions or more were similarly contagious as unvaccinated cases, whereas those with fewer than 50 lesions were only one third as contagious. The authors concluded, “Under conditions of intense exposure, varicella vaccine was highly effective in preventing moderate and severe disease and about 80 percent effective in preventing all disease. Breakthrough varicella cases in household settings were half as contagious as unvaccinated persons with varicella, although contagiousness varied with numbers of lesions.” (7) Also in August 2004, another study published in the Journal of Infectious Diseases, described chicken pox vaccine failure in an elementary school in Minnesota. The authors candidly stated in their introduction, “Since licensure in the United States, studies have shown that varicella vaccine's overall effectiveness ranges from 44 percent to 100 percent, with substantial protection against moderate and severe varicella; however, breakthrough illness has been documented in up to 56 percent of vaccinated individuals.” There were 319 students in that particular Minnesota school and 54 of them developed chicken pox. Of these, 29 students, or 53 percent, had been vaccinated. The authors estimated that the vaccine was 56 percent effective at preventing any chicken pox. (8) One can hardly get overly excited about the success of the chicken pox vaccination initiative or about the planned use of ProQuad for the second dose recommended at school entry. What the “ultimate cost” will be, no one really knows. For now, the CDC seems very happy to purchase the vaccines at “bargain” prices and distribute them. Until March 31, 2006, the CDC’s discounted price for ProQuad is $74.85 per dose. One dose of MMR II costs $16.67 and one dose of Varivax $52.25 — all available only in boxes of 10. The CDC will, therefore, save $5.93 per child by buying Proquad. (9) Pediatricians buying directly from Merck will pay substantially more. ProQuad will cost them $117.60 per dose; MMR II, $40.37; and Varivax, $66.81. It would be safe to bet that the price of ProQuad will go up in April as the CDC anoints it “The Vaccine of Choice” for preschoolers. For parents whose children sank into deeper regression after the second dose of MMR vaccine, the cost was enormous. Realizing that the odds of their children having been immune to measles, mumps and rubella was already 95 percent prior to that second dose has to be unbearable. * * * * References 1. F.E. Yazbak. “Mumps: Suddenly a serious problem.” Available at http://www.redflagsdaily.com/yazbak/2005_aug19.php 2. “Mumps Epidemic — United Kingdom, 2004-2005.” MMWR. Feb. 24, 2006; 55(07); 173-175. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5507a1.htm 3. “Mumps outbreak at camp among immunized children.” Children’s National Medical Center, Feb. 23, 2006. Available at http://www.dcchildrens.com/dcchildrens/NewsDisplay.aspx?ArticleId=2354 4. K.S. Reisinger, M.L. Brown, J. Xu, B.J. Sullivan, G.S. Marshall, B. Nauert, D.O. Matson, P.E. Silas, F. Schodel, J.O. Gress, B.J. Kuter. Protocol 014 Study Group for ProQuad. “A combination measles, mumps, rubella and varicella vaccine (ProQuad) given to 4- to 6-year-old healthy children vaccinated previously with MMR II and Varivax.” Pediatrics. February 2006; 117(2): 265-72. 5. “First Vaccine for Chicken Pox.” FDA Consumer. September 1995. Available at http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/795_chickpox.html 6. “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 47(RR-8); 1-57. May 22, 1998. Available at http://wonder.cdc.gov/wonder/prevguid/m0053391/m0053391.asp 7. J.F. Seward, J.X. Zhang, T.J. Maupin, L. Mascola, A.O. Jumaan. “Contagiousness of varicella in vaccinated cases: a household contact study.” JAMA. Aug. 11, 2004; 292(6): 704-8. 8. B. R. Lee, S.L. Feaver, C.A. , C.W. Hedberg, K.R. Ehresmann. “An elementary school outbreak of varicella attributed to vaccine failure: policy implications.” J Infect Dis. Aug. 1, 2004; 190(3): 477-83. 9. CDC Vaccine Price List, Dec. 22, 2005. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/nip/vfc/cdc_vac_price_list.htm#pediatric Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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