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The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on
Thursday urged doctors and health agencies to be more vigilant for suspected
cases of invasive Haemophilus influenzae type B in children under age 5, partly
because of an existing shortage of childhood Hib vaccine which will continue at
least until mid-2009.
Haemophilus influenzae type B is a bacterium that can on
rare occasions be deadly, invading the lining of the brain, bloodstream or
lungs. Infection can cause meningitis, sepsis or pneumonia, leading to brain damage
or death, CDC epidemiologist Mike Jackson said. Before any Hib vaccine was
available, some 20,000 US
children would get serious and sometimes fatal Hib infections every year, the
CDC noted.
The shortage is due to the fact that Merck & Co Inc last
year recalled its Hib vaccines because production equipment may not have been
properly sterilized. The company initially said its PedvaxHIB and COMVAX would
return to the US
market late this year. However, in October, it said they would not do so until
mid-2009.
To deal properly with the current shortage, the CDC
officials are recommending giving the Hib vaccine to infants, but holding off
on a recommended booster shot for children age 12 to 15 months, except those at
increased risk for Hib disease.
“Right now the recommendations are to make sure all children get the primary
vaccine series, and providers should defer giving the booster dose until the vaccine
supply increases. We are not worried about sudden increases in Hib disease, but
we are worried over time that, not having the booster, we could start to see
increases in Hib,” Jackson
said.
Therefore, the CDC urges doctors, health officials and parents to be extra
alert for Hib infections during the shortage.
The CDC warning was published in the Nov. 21 issue of its journal Morbidity
and Mortality Weekly Report.
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