Most Vaccine-Allergic Children Can Still Be Safely Vaccinated, Hopkins Experts Say |
Team offers step-by-step tool for safe immunization |
September 02, 2008 | With close monitoring and a few standard precautions, nearly all children with known or suspected vaccine allergies can be safely immunized, according to a team of vaccine safety experts led by the Johns Hopkins Children’s Center. |
Writing in the September issue of Pediatrics,
the multicenter research team offers pediatricians a step-by-step tool for
quickly identifying children with allergic reactions to vaccines, and a
much-needed guide, they say, to safely immunize those who are allergic. Serious allergic reactions to vaccines are
extremely rare — one or two per million vaccinations, according to some
estimates — but when they happen, such episodes can be serious, even
life-threatening, making it critical for pediatricians to instantly spot true
allergic reactions and differentiate them from more benign nonallergic
responses, investigators say. |
|
“We cannot reiterate enough that the
vaccines used today are extremely safe, but in a handful of children certain
vaccine ingredients can trigger serious allergic reactions,” says Robert
Wood, M.D., lead author on the paper and chief of pediatric Allergy and
Immunology at Hopkins Children’s. “For the most part, even children with
known allergies can be safely vaccinated.” Given recent outbreaks of vaccine-preventable
infections like measles, mumps and whooping cough in the United States, and
measles and polio overseas, it is essential to safely vaccinate as many
children as possible, investigators say. Combing through available evidence on vaccine
safety and allergies, the Hopkins-led team developed a sequence of
instructions – an algorithm – that prompts physicians one step at a time
on how to evaluate and immunize children with known or suspected vaccine
allergies. The guidelines are intended for doctors and
parents who are uncertain about vaccine safety in children who have already
had or are at high risk for having allergic reactions to vaccines. In such cases, the Hopkins-led group advises a
workup by an allergist, including skin prick testing—a prick on the skin or
an injection under the skin with a small dose of vaccine or the suspected
allergen from the vaccine—or blood tests that would detect the presence of
characteristic antibodies that patients develop to allergens, such as
antibodies to gelatin or egg proteins used in several common vaccines. In many cases, allergic children can be
vaccinated using alternative forms of a vaccine that are free of the allergen.
Even if allergen-free formulations are unavailable, many children can still be
vaccinated and remain under physician supervision for several hours after
vaccination. Another option is testing the child to check for immunity. If
blood tests show the child has already developed protective antibodies, it may
be OK, at least temporarily, to withhold further doses of the vaccine,
researchers write. “Vaccines save lives, and parents should
know that children who have had allergic reactions after a vaccine are likely
to have developed protection against infection as a result of the
vaccination,” says investigator Neal Halsey, M.D., an infectious disease
specialist at Hopkins Children’s, and professor of International Health at
the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health. “Most children who have had an allergic
reaction after a vaccine can still be vaccinated against other diseases safely
and some can receive additional doses of vaccines they might have reacted
to,” Halsey adds. Many children with known vaccine allergies who
have low levels of protective antibodies and require more doses can be
vaccinated safely under the guidelines. In some cases, children with known
allergies can be given antiallergy medications, such as antihistamines and
corticosteroids, before vaccination to help ward off or lessen the allergic
reaction. For a step-by-step guide to vaccine administration in children with
known or suspected vaccine allergy, see the full text of the article at
http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/future/122.3.shtml. Immunizations of children with known vaccine
allergies should always be administered under medical supervision in a clinic
equipped to treat life-threatening allergic reactions or in a hospital
intensive-care unit. Patients can usually go home after an hour or two if they
have no adverse reactions. True allergies typically cause immediate
reactions, involving the immune system as a whole that occur within a few
minutes to a few hours of vaccination. By contrast, delayed reactions, which
occur within days, even weeks after vaccination, are generally benign and are
rarely, if ever, dangerous. Symptoms of immediate allergic reactions
include hives, swelling, wheezing, coughing, low blood pressure, vomiting,
diarrhea, and can lead to full-blown anaphylaxis, a life-threatening allergic
reaction. The research was funded by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. Co-investigators on the research: Melvin
Berger, M.D. Ph.D., University Hospitals of Cleveland; Stephen Dreskin, M.D.
Ph.D., University of Colorado; Rosanna Setse, M.D. M.P.H., Johns Hopkins
University Bloomberg School of Public Health; Renata Engler, M.D., Walter Reed
Army Medical Institute; Cornelia Dekker, M.D., Stanford University School of
Medicine. The Clinical Immunization Safety Assessment Network, consisting of
six medical research centers with expertise in immunization safety, was part
of the study. Conflict of interest disclosure for Hopkins
investigators: Halsey has received research support from vaccine manufacturer
Wyeth and is a consultant for vaccine manufacturers GlaxoSmithKline and Merck. Founded in 1912 as the children's hospital
of the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, the Johns Hopkins Children's Center
offers one of the most comprehensive pediatric medical programs in the
country, treating more than 90,000 children each year. Hopkins Children’s
ranks among the top children's hospitals in the nation. Hopkins Children’s
is Maryland's largest children's hospital and is the only state-designated
Trauma Service and Burn Unit for pediatric patients. It has recognized Centers
of Excellence in 20 pediatric subspecialties including cardiology, transplant,
psychiatric illnesses and genetic disorders. |
| Source: http://www.hopkinschildrens.org/ |
|
Copyright © 2003-2009 HealthOrbit, Inc. All rights reserved. |