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Module 1: Review of Selfstudy

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21,000 paralytic cases reported in the USA in 1952. Replication in pharynx, GI tract, ... Last case in United States in 1979. Western Hemisphere certified ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Module 1: Review of Selfstudy


1
  • Module 1 Review of Self-study
  • Vaccine Preventable Diseases

OSU College of Pharmacy Immunization Delivery
Certification Program National Immunization
Program Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
2
submandibular edema (bullneck)
3
Thick gray coating over back of throat
4
Dermal Lesion on Neck
5
Diphtheria Clinical Features
  • Incubation period 2-5 days (range, 1-10 days)
  • Reservior Asympomatic human carriers
  • (can shed virus via respiratory transmission for
    6 months or more)
  • May involve any mucous membrane

6
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7
Painful Muscle Contractions
8
Tetanus Epidemiology
  • Reservoir Soil and intestine of
    animals and humans
  • Transmission Contaminated wounds Tissue
    injury
  • Temporal pattern Peak in summer or wet
    season
  • Communicability Not contagious

9
Tetanus Clinical Features
  • Incubation period 8 days (range, 3-21 days)
  • Interferes with neurotransmitter release to block
    inhibitor impulses
  • Generalized tetanus descending symptoms of
    trismus (lockjaw), difficulty swallowing, muscle
    rigidity, spasms
  • Spasms continue for 3-4 weeks complete recovery
    may take months

10
TetanusUnited States, 1947-2005
Year
2005 provisional total
11
TetanusUnited States, 1980-2005
Year
2005 provisional total
12
TetanusUnited States, 1980-2003Age Distribution
N1,277
13
Tetanus1998-2000Injuries and Conditions
Data available for 129 of 130 reported cases.
Source MMWR 200352(SS-3)1-12
14
Routine Td ScheduleUnvaccinated Persons 7 Years
of Age
Booster dose every 10 years
ACIP recommends that one of these doses
(preferably the first) be administered as Tdap
15
Broken Blood Vessels in Sclera Facial Bruising
From Intensive Coughing
16
Pertussis Pathogenesis
  • Attachment to cilia of ciliated epithelial cells
    in respiratory tract
  • Pertussis antigens allow evasion of host defenses
    (lymphocytosis promoted but impaired chemotaxis)
  • Local tissue damage in respiratory tract

17
Pertussis Clinical Features
  • Incubation period 7-10 days
  • (range 4-21 days)
  • Insidious onset, similar to minor upper
    respiratory infection with nonspecific cough
  • Fever usually minimal throughout course of
    illness
  • Adolescents and adults account for more than half
    of reported cases

18
Pertussis Complications by Age
Cases reported to CDC 1997-2000 (N28,187)
19
  • PertussisUnited States, 1940-2005

Year
2005 provisional total
20
  • PertussisUnited States, 1980-2005

Year
2005 provisional total
21
Acellular Pertussis Vaccines
  • Purified "subunit" vaccines
  • Pediatric formulations (DTaP) licensed for full
    series in 1996
  • Adolescent and adult formulations (Tdap) licensed
    in 2005

22
Acellular Pertussis Vaccines
ProductDaptacel Sanofi Pasteur (DTaP) Infanrix
GlaxoSmithKline (DTaP) Tripedia Sanofi
Pasteur (DTaP) Approved for use in children lt
7yrs of age All are suspensions stored in the
refrigerator
mcg per dose
23
Interchangeability of Different Brands of DTaP
Vaccine
  • Series should be completed with same brand of
    vaccine if possible
  • Limited data suggest that mix and match DTaP
    schedules do not adversely affect safety and
    immunogenicity
  • Use different brand of DTaP if necessary

24
Boostrix 1st Teenage Pertussis Vaccine
  • Boostrix Tetanus Toxoid, Reduced Diphtheria
    Toxoid and Acellular Pertussis Vaccine, Adsorbed
    (Tdap) as a single dose active booster
    immunization against tetanus, diphtheria, and
    pertussis in individuals 10 through 18 years of
    age.

25
DTP Combined with Other Vaccines
  • TriHIBit (DTap-Hib)
  • DTaP-Hib combination
  • DO NOT USE for primary immunization at 2, 4, or 6
    months of age
  • May be used as the booster dose of the Hib series
    at gt12 months of age following any Hib vaccine
  • Pediarix (DTap-HBV-IPV)
  • DTaP Hep B IPV combination
  • Approved for 3 doses at 2, 4 and 6 months
  • Not approved for booster doses
  • Licensed for children 6 weeks to 7 years of age

booster dose should follow prior dose by gt2
months
26
  • Routine DTaP Primary Vaccination Schedule

Minimum Interval --- 4 wks 4 wks 6 mos
Dose Primary 1 Primary 2 Primary 3 Primary 4
Age 2 months 4 months 6 months 15-18 months
27
DTaP Fourth Dose
  • Recommended at 15-18 months
  • May be given at 12 months of age if
  • child is 12 months of age, and
  • 6 months since DTaP3, and
  • unlikely to return at 15-18 months

17-20 months for Daptacel
28
School Entry (Fifth) Dose
  • Fifth dose recommended when 4th dose given before
    age 4 years
  • Infanrix and Tripedia licensed for 5th dose after
    DTaP series

29
Provisional ACIP Recommendations for Tdap
Vaccines
  • Adolescents 11-18 years of age should receive a
    single dose of Tdap instead of Td, preferably at
    11-12 years of age
  • Adolescents who received a Td booster should
    receive a single dose of Tdap to provide
    protection against pertussis

if the person has completed the recommended
childhood DTaP/DTP vaccination series
30
Provisional ACIP Recommendations for Tdap Vaccines
  • Adults should receive a single dose of Tdap to
    replace a single dose of Td
  • Adults who have or who anticipate having close
    contact with an infant 12 months of age or
    younger (e.g., parents, child care providers,
    healthcare providers) should receive a single
    dose of Tdap
  • Any woman who might become pregnant is encouraged
    to receive a single dose of Tdap

if the person has completed the recommended
childhood DTaP/DTP vaccination series
31
DTaP Adverse Reactions
  • Local reactions (pain, redness, or swelling at
    the site of injection)
  • Low-grade fever
  • More severe adverse reactions not common
  • Local reactions more common following 4th and 5th
    doses

32
Adverse Reactions Following the 4th and 5th DTaP
Dose
  • Local adverse reactions and fever increased with
    4th and 5th doses of DTaP
  • Reports of swelling of entire limb
  • Extensive swelling after 4th dose NOT a
    contraindication to 5th dose

33
DTaP Precautions
  • Moderate or severe acute illness
  • Temperature gt105F (40.5C) or higher within 48
    hours with no other identifiable cause
  • Collapse or shock-like state (hypotonic
    hyporesponsive episode) within 48 hours
  • Persistent, inconsolable crying lasting gt3 hours,
    occurring within 48 hours
  • Convulsions with or without fever occurring
    within 3 days

may consider use in outbreaks
34
Tdap Precautions
  • History of Guillain-Barré syndrome within 6 weeks
    after a previous dose of tetanus
    toxoid-containing vaccine
  • Progressive neurological disorder until the
    condition has stabilized
  • History of a severe local reaction (Arthus
    reaction) following a prior dose of a tetanus
    and/or diphtheria toxoid-containing vaccine
  • Moderate or severe acute illness

35
DTaP Contraindications
  • Severe allergic reaction to vaccine component or
    following a prior dose
  • Encephalopathy not due to another identifiable
    cause occurring within 7 days after vaccination

36
Limb Deformities in Children in Sierra Leone,
Africa?
37
Young Man with Withered Leg
38
Poliomyelitis
  • 21,000 paralytic cases reported in the USA in
    1952
  • Replication in pharynx, GI tract, local
    lymphatics
  • Hematologic spread to lymphatics and central
    nervous system
  • Viral spread along nerve fibers
  • Destruction of motor neurons

39
Poliovirus Epidemiology
  • Reservoir Human
  • Transmission Fecal-oral Oral-oral
    possible
  • Communicability 7-10 days before onset Virus
    present in stool 3-6 wks

40
Inactivated Polio Vaccine
  • Brand Name Ipol Sanofi Pasteur
  • Contains 3 serotypes of vaccine virus
  • Contains 2-phenoxyethanol, neomycin,
    streptomycin, polymyxin B
  • Exclusive use recommended in 2000
  • gt90 immune after 2 doses
  • gt99 immune after 3 doses
  • Duration of immunity not known with certainty

41
Pediarix
  • Contains IPV, DTaP, and hepatitis B vaccines
  • Minimum age 6 weeks, maximum age 6 years
  • Approved by FDA for first 3 doses of the IPV and
    DTaP series
  • Not approved for booster doses

42
Polio Vaccination of Adults
  • Routine vaccination of U.S. residents gt18 years
    of age not necessary or recommended
  • May consider vaccination of travelers to
    polio-endemic countries and selected laboratory
    workers
  • Dosing IPV in Adults 3 doses 2 doses 4-8 wks
    apart, with third dose given 6-12 months later.
  • May separate doses by 4 weeks if accelerated
    schedule needed

43
Polio Vaccine Adverse Reactions
  • Rare local reactions (IPV)
  • No serious reactions to IPV have been documented

44
Polio VaccineContraindications and Precautions
  • Severe allergic reaction to a vaccine component
    or following a prior dose of vaccine
  • Moderate or severe acute illness

45
Polio Eradication
  • Last case in United States in 1979
  • Western Hemisphere certified polio free in 1994
  • Last isolate of type 2 poliovirus in India in
    October 1999
  • Global eradication goal

46
Cellulitis in an Infant
47
Haemophilus influenzae type b
  • Severe bacterial infection, particularly among
    infants
  • Organism colonizes nasopharynx
  • In some persons organism invades bloodstream and
    cause infection at distant site
  • Antecedent upper respiratory tract infection may
    be a contributing factor

48
Haemophilus influenzae type b
  • Reservoir Human Asymptomatic carriers
  • Transmission Respiratory droplets
  • Temporal pattern Peaks in Sept-Dec and
    March-May
  • Communicability Generally limited
    but higher in some circumstances

49
Haemophilus influenzae type b Meningitis
  • Accounted for approximately 50-65 of cases in
    the prevaccine era
  • Hearing impairment or neurologic sequelae in
    15-30
  • Case-fatality rate 2-5 despite of effective
    antimicrobial therapy

50
Haemophilus influenzae type b Polysaccharide
Conjugate Vaccine
  • 3 conjugate vaccines licensed for use in infants
    as young as 6 weeks of age
  • All utilize different carrier proteins
  • 2 combination vaccines available that contain Hib
    vaccine

51
Haemophilus influenzae type b Polysaccharide
Conjugate Vaccine
  • HbOC Hibtiter
  • -oligosaccharide conjugate
  • PRP-T ActHIB, TriHIBit
  • -Tetanus Toxoid conjugate
  • PRP-OMP PedvaxHIB, COMVAX
  • -outer membrane protein conjugate

52
Combination Vaccines Containing Hib
  • DTaPHib
  • TriHIBit
  • Approved for the fourth dose of the DTaP and Hib
    series only
  • Hepatitis BHib
  • COMVAX

53
Hib vaccine
  • Start at 2 months
  • Recommended interval 8 weeks for primary series
    doses
  • Minimum interval 4 weeks for primary series doses
  • Vaccination at lt6 weeks of age may induce
    immunologic tolerance to Hib antigen
  • Minimum age 6 weeks

54
Hib Vaccine adverse reactions
  • Swelling, redness, or pain in 5-30 of
    recipients
  • Systemic reactions infrequent
  • Serious adverse reactions rare

55
Hib Vaccine contraindications and precautions
  • Severe allergic reaction to vaccine component or
    following a prior dose
  • Moderate or severe acute illness
  • Age lt6 weeks
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