Chickenpox Vaccination
May Not Prevent Infection
During an outbreak of chickenpox in
Minnesota in the fall of 2002, more than half the children who
became infected had been immunized with the varicella vaccine,
according to a new report.
Dr. Brian R. Lee, at the Minnesota
Department of Health in Minneapolis, and his colleagues investigated
the outbreak that involved 55 children among 319 attending an
elementary school in northern Minnesota.
According to the team's report
in the Journal of infectious Diseases, 29 of the affected children
had been vaccinated, and 6 had apparently had chickenpox previously
-- which usually prevents another infection.
The primary case in the outbreak
was a vaccinated 6-year-old boy.
The investigators found that 25
percent of vaccinated children came down with chickenpox, as did
56 percent of unvaccinated students; among those with a history
of varicella, the infection rate was 6 percent.
Lee's group estimates that the
effectiveness of the vaccine in warding off infection was 56 percent.
However, immunized children did have fewer lesions, less fever,
and fewer sick days than their non-immunized kids.
The risk of catching chickenpox
was more than two-fold higher for those vaccinated 4 or more years
before the outbreak, compared with those vaccinated more recently
-- so protection wanes over time.
These findings underscore the importance
of keeping any child with chickenpox out of school, regardless
of their vaccination status, Lee's team states.
They also highlight the importance
of continuing "to maintain and improve the national level of vaccination
against varicella zoster and to consider whether a booster dose
will offer additional protection," the researchers conclude.
SOURCE: Journal of infectious Diseases,
August 1, 2004.
Reference
Source 89
August 2, 2004
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