The large mumps outbreak in the United States in 2006 was the first
ever caused by the failure of the vaccine, federal health experts said Thursday.
The outbreak was the worst in 20 years (6584 cases), the
disease spreading fast in eight states including Illinois, Iowa, Kansas,
Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, South Dakota and Wisconsin. They all had 85
percent of the cases. Most of the people infected with mumps had received the
second recommended dose of a mumps vaccine, the researchers reported and still
they became ill.
“Despite a high coverage rate with two doses of mumps-containing vaccine, a
large mumps outbreak occurred, characterized by two-dose vaccine failure,
particularly among Midwestern college-age adults who probably received the
second dose as schoolchildren. A more effective mumps vaccine or changes in
vaccine policy may be needed to avert future outbreaks and achieve the
elimination of mumps,” Gustavo Dayan of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention in Atlanta
and colleagues wrote in a study appearing in the April 11 issue of the New
England Journal of Medicine.
Eighty-five people needed hospitalization. Fortunately, there were no deaths.
However, 11 people lost their hearing and 22 developed meningitis, according to
the report.
“It would have been tens of thousands of cases if we didn’t have the
coverage,” said Jane Seward, deputy director of the CDC’s division of viral
disease, according to Reuters.
Mumps is a disease caused by a virus that usually spreads through saliva and
can infect many parts of the body, but mostly the parotid salivary glands. These
glands are located towards the back of each cheek, in the area between the ear
and jaw. In cases of mumps, these glands typically swell and become painful.
After the 2006 outbreak, there hasn’t been another of the same proportion in
the U.S.
However, the CDC has already set a goal of eliminating mumps by 2010 in the U.S.
But, according to the report, the current vaccine is only 90 percent effective
after two doses.
“So, even if you had a 100 percent vaccination rate, you would still have 10
out of every 100 people susceptible to mumps,” study co-author Amy A. Parker,
from the CDC explained.
Therefore, in order to achieve the 2010 goal, Parker said the vaccine needs
to be changed in order to be effective or the number of shots should be
considered. Now two shots are recommended, one at 12 to 15 months and the other
at age 4 to 6.
There is another reason that might stay in the way of
reaching the 2010 goal with so many parents not vaccinating their children
because fears about the safety of the combined measles, mumps and rubella (MMR)
vaccine. But, health experts say these fears are grounded and parents who do
not vaccinate their children put them at risk.