Guest guest Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 " Although application of new scientific methods, such as RNA sequencing, could be used to describe more completely the virus that causes SSPE, the well-known genetic alterations of the virus from wild-type measles virus will confound interpretation of the data and make it unlikely that investigators will be able to determine whether there is an independent association between measles vaccine and the development of SSPE. " This makes no sense to me. If we know the genetic alterations that distinguish wild and vaccine measles RNA, wiuldn't that clear up the confusion over which caused the SSPE? ________________________________________________________________________________\ ____ Looking for last minute shopping deals? Find them fast with Search. http://tools.search./newsearch/category.php?category=shopping Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2009 Report Share Posted February 15, 2009 Measles Vaccines Reactions - SSPE Pages 135 - 142 http://books.nap.edu/books/0309048958/html/135.html#pagetop SUBACUTE SCLEROSING PANENCEPHALITIS Clinical Description Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a rare subacute encephalitis accompanied by demyelination. The entire course of SSPE may be one of slow progressive deterioration, but variable periods of remission can occur. The usual duration is about 12 to 24 months to a vegetative state or death. A more complete discussion of SSPE can be found in Chapter 3. History of Suspected Association Laboratory findings implicate a measles-like virus as the cause of SSPE. Epidemiologic data have also linked SSPE to prior measles infection. The first report of SSPE in a patient with a negative history for measles but a positive history of vaccination with live attenuated measles vaccine was reported in 1968 (Schneck, 1968). The child had received measles vaccine with immune globulin 3 weeks prior to the onset of symptoms. The clinical course accelerated 10 weeks after vaccination, and the child died 18 months after vaccination. Serologic studies were not performed, but postmortem histologic examination of the brain supported a diagnosis of SSPE. Several more case reports of SSPE in children negative by history for measles but positive for receipt of the measles vaccine followed and are described in more detail below. The dramatic decline in the number of measles cases in the United States from 1964 to 1968 paralleled a decline in the number of cases of SSPE starting in the early 1970's. Only 4.2 new cases of SSPE per year, on average, were reported from 1982 to 1986 (Dyken et al., 1989). This is in contrast to the 48.6 new cases of SSPE per year, on average, reported from 1967 to 1971. This decline is attributed to the increased use of measles vaccine, introduced in the United States in 1963. However, a report of data from the National Registry for Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis showed that the proportion of newly diagnosed cases of SSPE occurring in children identified by history as vaccinated against measles increased approximately threefold from 1967 to 1974 (Modlin et al., 1977). These data are discussed in more detail below. The first publication in 1972 of data in the newly established National Registry for Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis in the United States reported 14 patients (of a total of 219 records in the registry) who had received a measles vaccine prior to the onset between 1960 and 1970 of SSPE (Jabbout et al., 1972). Six of the 14 patients were reported to have had measles prior to the onset of SSPE as well. The interval between vaccination and the onset of SSPE was 1 year or more in all 14 cases. The specific type of measles vaccine administered is not known. The committee was charged with investigating a possible causal relation between measles vaccine only and SSPE. Evidence for Association Biologic Plausibility SSPE is a recognized sequela of measles infection, and it is biologically plausible that it could occur after administration of the live attenuated viral vaccine. Identification of the cause of SSPE as wild-type or vaccine-strain measles virus has not been possible. The viruses isolated from patients with SSPE differ from the known measles viruses. The viruses may have become altered by the prolonged residence in the brains of the patients, or they may have been different at the time of the original infection. Case Reports, Case Series, and Uncontrolled Observational Studies The first published case report of SSPE in a child with a history of vaccination with live attenuated measles vaccine appeared in 1968 and was described above (Schneck, 1968). In the following 5 years, several more reports of SSPE in individuals vaccinated against measles appeared (Cho et al., 1973; Gerson and Haslam, 1971; Jabbour et al., 1972; Klajman et al., 1973; Landrigan and Witte, 1973; et al., 1970; Payne et al., 1969). These reports represented a total of 22 patients with SSPE, 7 of whom had a history of both measles and measles vaccination (Gerson and Haslam, 1971; Jabbour et al., 1972). The other 15 patients had a negative history for measles and a positive history for receipt of live attenuated measles vaccine (Cho et al., 1973; Jabbour et al., 1972; Klajman et al., 1973; Landrigan and Witte, 1973; et al., 1970; Payne et al., 1969; Schneck, 1968). For two of those 15 patients, exposure to measles virus was probable, but clinical measles was not recorded (Landrigan and Witte, 1973; et al., 1970). The latency between vaccination against measles and the onset of SSPE symptoms ranged from 3 weeks (Landrigan and Witte, 1973; Schneck, 1968) to 5 years (Cho et al., 1973). The absence of prevaccination serology and the inability to characterize the cause of SSPE as wild-type or vaccine-strain measles virus in all cases preclude, as discussed below, a determination that the SSPE was caused by administration of the live attenuated measles vaccine. A negative history of natural measles disease in unimmunized persons is always suspect because measles infection can occur subclinically without rash. No case reports of SSPE definitively show that the cause of SSPE in a specific patient was the vaccine-strain virus and not the wild-type virus. In 1978 the question about SSPE and measles vaccine surfaced again in response to a report concerning a boy who at age 7 years showed signs of SSPE, including deterioration in school performance, incontinence, and forgetfulness (Dodson et al., 1978). Within a few weeks of receiving live attenuated measles vaccine at age 8 years, the patient's symptoms progressed. At 2.5 to 3 months after vaccination, the patient died. SSPE was diagnosed by high measles virus titers in serum and CSF and a high ratio of immunoglobulin G/albumin in serum and CSF. At age 13 months he had suffered a mild illness considered by history to be measles. The authors hypothesized that the measles vaccine accelerated an already evolving SSPE. The National Registry for Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis was founded in 1969, in response to an interest in the effects of measles vaccine on the incidence of SSPE (Schacher, 1968). Originally housed at the University of Tennessee Center for Health Sciences, it now resides at the University of South Alabama. The registry now includes data on more than 575 patients ( R. Dyken, University of South Alabama, Mobile, personal communication, 1993). The number of new cases of SSPE documented in the registry decreased from 46 in 1967 to 33 in 1972 to 13 in 1974 (Modlin et al., 1977). The average number of new reports of SSPE per year from 1982 to 1986 was 4.2 (Dyken et al., 1989) and is now about 1, although underreporting is suspected ( R. Dyken, University of South Alabama, Mobile, personal communication, 1993). Analysis of 375 confirmed cases of SSPE that occurred in the United States from 1960 to 1974 (Modlin et al., 1977) demonstrated a decreasing incidence of SSPE beginning in the early 1970's. From 1967 to 1970 the proportion of new cases of SSPE associated with measles vaccine was less than 13 percent, but it increased to 20.6 percent in 1973 and 38.5 percent in 1974. This prompted the authors to note: Although far from conclusive, the data presented here suggest that live, attenuated measles vaccine virus may be capable of contributing to the pathogenesis of SSPE. However, the risk of SSPE following vaccination, if any, appears less than the risk following natural measles (Modlin et al., 1977, p. 511). A review of the data in the registry of patients with SSPE whose onset occurred up to 1986 (Dyken et al., 1989), which included the 375 patients described by Modlin et al. (1977) in the study described above and 200 additional patients, confirmed the continuing decline in the incidence of SSPE and the increase in the proportion of patients with SSPE who had a history of measles vaccination. Reports of patients with SSPE from other countries after the institution of measles immunization campaigns have supported a role for measles disease in the pathogenesis of SSPE. The very high levels of hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) antibody in the serum and CSF of 100 patients with SSPE observed in Tehran, Iran, between 1977 and 1982 (Mirchamsy, 1983) compared with the HAI antibody levels in patients known to have been vaccinated against measles suggest that these patients had naturally acquired measles. Similarly, all 70 patients with SSPE reported to the Virusdiagnostic Laboratory in Stuttgart, Germany, between 1967 and 1978 were negative for measles vaccination by history (Enders-Ruckle, 1978). Of 26 patients with documented SSPE in Northern Ireland between 1965 and 1985, none had a history of measles vaccination (Morrow et al., 1986). Beersma and colleagues (1988) described 77 patients with SSPE in The Netherlands whose onset of symptoms occurred between 1976 and 1986. Only two of the patients had received a measles vaccine. One of the two patients developed clinical measles 1 week after vaccination and SSPE 9 years later. The other child developed SSPE 1.5 years after vaccination against measles. Prior measles virus infection could not be ruled out. Eleven of 215 patients with SSPE identified in Japan between 1966 and 1985 had received measles vaccine but had not had measles virus infection by history. A total of 184 patients had a history of measles virus infection but not vaccination against measles (Okuno et al., 1989). There are no reports of SSPE in VAERS (submitted between November 1990 and July 1992), nor is there a discussion of SSPE in the surveillance reports from the data base of the Monitoring System for Adverse Events Following Immunization (MSAEFI), which preceded VAERS. Controlled Observational Studies Because SSPE is such a rare condition, study of its etiology is best done by using a case-control design. Patients known to have SSPE are compared with individuals without SSPE to determine whether the proportions of certain characteristics or factors thought to be disease related are similar in the two groups. In this way, a number of possible etiologic factors can be investigated in a single study. In the years between the two reviews of the data in the SSPE registry discussed above, a case-control study of patients in the SSPE registry was reported (Halsey et al., 1980). Fifty-two patients with SSPE were compared with controls (49 playmates and 49 hospitalized children) matched for age, sex, and race. Children with SSPE were more likely than their age-matched controls to have had measles (odds ratio [OR], 7; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 2.5 to 19.6), but they were less likely than controls to have received measles vaccine (OR, 0.28; 95% CI, 0.11 to 0.70). The age of infection with measles virus for children with SSPE was significantly less than that for controls who had measles. There was no difference in age at the time of vaccination between those subjects and controls who did not have a prior measles infection. The same proportion of cases as controls had more than one measles vaccination. If the etiology of SSPE has changed over the years such that a proportion of all cases were due to the vaccine, then the demographic and epidemiologic characteristics of the SSPE cases would be expected to change as well. Two such ecologic studies have been reported. When U.S. patients whose SSPE was diagnosed between 1956 and 1975 were compared with those whose SSPE was diagnosed between 1976 and 1986, there was no difference in the ratio of males to females or in the proportion of African Americans with SSPE (Dyken et al., 1989). The question of latency was assessed by dividing the patients into three groups: those with a history of measles only, those with a history of both measles and measles vaccination, and those with a history of measles vaccination only. The latency to the onset of SSPE for each of the three groups increased between the periods of 1956-1966 and 1980-1986. The latency to the onset of SSPE for the group with a history of measles vaccine only was shorter than the latencies for the groups with a history of measles, but this difference was not statistically significant. Similar analyses were done for cases of SSPE in Romania. Cernescu et al. (1990) compared 50 patients whose SSPE onset was in 1978-1979 with 62 patients whose SSPE onset was in 1988-1989. The patients in the 1978-1979 cohort were diagnosed before the national measles immunization program in Romania was implemented in 1979. For the 1988-1989 cohort, they found an increased mean age at the time of onset (6.1 versus 12.1 years) and a difference in the ratio of males to females (2.7:1 versus 0.76:1). They also reported that 76 percent of the cases of SSPE from the 1978-1979 cohort reported a primary measles infection at less than 2 years of age, compared with only 47 percent of the 1988-1989 cohort. The mean interval from the time of measles to the onset of SSPE also increased, from 54 to 106 months, as had the proportion of cases with extreme levels of measles antibody (36 versus 88.7 percent). Controlled Clinical Trials No controlled clinical trials of measles vaccination have provided data on the incidence of SSPE. The Medical Research Council of the United Kingdom reported follow-up data on the incidence and complications of wild-type measles infection from a randomized trial of 36,000 patients who received either live measles vaccine or killed vaccine followed later by live measles vaccine or no vaccine. Follow-up was for up to 4 years and 9 months (Medical Research Council, 1971). No mention was made of SSPE, indicating either that there were no cases or that it was not an outcome that was examined. Because other neurologic events were noted and because SSPE is such a striking and serious disease, it is likely that any cases of SSPE would have been reported, if they had occurred. Causality Argument There is no question that measles virus is causally related to SSPE. Therefore, it is biologically plausible that there is a link between receipt of live attenuated measles vaccine and SSPE. There is strong evidence that if such an association does exist, it would be very weak compared with the association between a naturally acquired measles infection and SSPE. This evidence is mainly temporal; that is, the incidence of SSPE has decreased dramatically in parallel with widespread measles immunization. There have been only two new cases of SSPE in U.S. citizens reported to the National Registry of Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis since 1989 ( R. Dyken, University of South Alabama, Mobile, personal communication, 1993). Neither patient had a history of natural measles infection. One patient was immunized at 15 months of age. It is likely that at least some patients with SSPE have had unrecognized measles infection prior to immunization, and that the SSPE is directly related to this measles infection. Evidence for this comes from Krugman et al. (1962), who reported that before the use of measles vaccine, 15 percent of children whose parents reported no history of measles were found to be immune to the infection. In addition, data on 375 children in the National Registry for Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis obtained from Modlin et al. (1977) indicated that four children who had SSPE but no history of measles or measles vaccination in fact had elevated measles virus antibody titers. The data of Cernescu et al. (1990) showing that the characteristics of patients with SSPE onset in 1978-1979 (prior to national measles immunization) differ from those of patients with SSPE onset in 1988-1989 indicate a possible change in the nature of the disease since the introduction of measles vaccine and a concurrent decrease in the incidence of measles. If such a change is confirmed by other studies (and this will be difficult, because there are so few new cases of SSPE), it could indicate a different etiology for current SSPE cases compared with those in the past. It could also merely indicate a change in the time of life at which a child is infected with measles and subsequently develops SSPE (e.g., since the beginning of widespread immunization, perhaps only infants who are too young for immunization are infected with measles virus and only a proportion of these develop SSPE). It will be difficult to obtain other evidence for a causal relation between measles vaccine and SSPE. First, the number of cases of SSPE in the United States is now so low that detection of even moderately strong associations may be difficult. Second, the period of time between infection with the measles virus and development of SSPE is quite long, and if an association between measles vaccine and SSPE exists, a similarly long latency (perhaps 10 years or more) would be expected. Even if the latencies for the two conditions were different and the difference were moderately large, the difference would be difficult to detect because the range of time from measles infection to SSPE is fairly long and the number of new cases of SSPE is low. Although application of new scientific methods, such as RNA sequencing, could be used to describe more completely the virus that causes SSPE, the well-known genetic alterations of the virus from wild-type measles virus will confound interpretation of the data and make it unlikely that investigators will be able to determine whether there is an independent association between measles vaccine and the development of SSPE. There has been some concern as to whether measles vaccine could exacerbate preexisting SSPE (Dodson et al., 1978) and whether a second dose of measles vaccine could more often result in SSPE (Halsey, 1990). After publication of the case report of Dodson et al. (1978) of an 8-year-old boy with SSPE whose condition appeared to have been exacerbated by administration of the measles vaccine, Halsey et al. (1978) reported data suggesting that such a concern was not warranted. The National Registry for Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis contained records of nine patients who received attenuated or killed measles vaccine after the onset of SSPE symptoms. Four of the nine patients died an average of 3.6 years after the onset of SSPE symptoms and 2.4 years after vaccination. The remaining five patients on record at that time were still alive an average of 10.5 years after the onset of SSPE symptoms and 9.3 years after vaccination. Halsey and colleagues argued that the variability in the course of SSPE rendered the assertions of Dodson et al. (1978) questionable. The same data set contained evidence that the proportion of SSPE patients who received more than one dose of vaccine was the same as for the control population. Conclusion The evidence is inadequate to accept or reject a causal relation between measles vaccine and SSPE. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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