Article

Maternal vaccination against pertussis can protect premature infants

Family Practice News. June 2, 2016.

Key clinical point: Vaccination of pregnant women early in their third trimester may protect premature infants against pertussis.

Major finding: At 2 months after birth, infants born to vaccinated mothers displayed higher antibody concentrations to vaccine antigens than did infants born to unvaccinated mothers.

Data source: Premature infants born to mothers that did or did not receive Repevax from 28 weeks of pregnancy.

Disclosures: Pfizer Ltd. and the National Institute for Health Research Clinical Research Network funded the study. Professor Heath and Dr. Ladhani disclosed conducting studies on behalf of St George’s, University of London funded by vaccine manufacturers without receiving personal payments or travel support. The other authors reported no conflicts of interest.


 

FROM PEDIATRICS

References

Maternal immunization in the early third trimester (from 28 weeks’ gestation) may protect premature infants from pertussis, study results found.

This was the finding of an observational substudy of a larger multicenter, randomized, controlled vaccination trial of premature infants (the PUNS trial), which compared pertussis antibody concentrations before and after primary immunization in premature infants born to mothers who were or were not vaccinated with Repevax. Dr. Alison Kent of St George’s, University of London, and colleagues assessed the levels of the five vaccine antigens present in the maternal combination Repevax vaccine (pertussis toxoid, filamentous hemagglutinin, fimbriae types 2 and 3, diphtheria toxoid, tetanus toxoid, and inactivated poliovirus) in premature infants born to mothers who either received or did not receive Repevax from 28 weeks’ gestation. Antigen quantifications were conducted in these premature infants at approximately 2, 5, and 12 months of age.

©Jacopo Werther/Wikimedia Commons/Creative Commons Attribution 2.0

Thirty-one (19%) of the 160 premature infants in the substudy were born to mothers who had been vaccinated. Two months after their premature birth, infants born to vaccinated mothers had significantly higher concentrations of all five measured antigens, compared with those born to unvaccinated mothers (all P values less than .001). Although fewer infants were sampled at 5 months of age, significantly higher concentrations of filamentous hemagglutinin and diphtheria toxoid were still found in those born to vaccinated mothers (both P = .003). Data collected at the 12-month assessment indicated that only tetanus antibody concentrations remained significantly higher in those born to vaccinated mothers (P = .015). A positive correlation between the number of days from maternal vaccination to delivery was found for all measured antigens, with the exception of fimbriae types 2 and 3.

“The emergency introduction of a maternal immunization program to control a national pertussis outbreak serendipitously provided an opportunity to assess antibody concentrations to maternal vaccine antigens in premature infants,” Dr. Kent and associates noted in Pediatrics (June 2016 doi: 10.1542/peds.2015-3854). This unexpected opportunity resulted in evidence supporting a protective effect against pertussis in the early lives of infants born prematurely to mothers immunized in their early third trimester.

Pfizer and the National Institute for Health Research Clinical Research Network funded the study. Professor Heath and Dr. Ladhani disclosed conducting studies on behalf of St George’s, University of London funded by vaccine manufacturers without receiving personal payments or travel support. The other authors reported no conflicts of interest.

Recommended Reading

Hepatitis A and B combo vaccinations remain effective after 15 years
MDedge Family Medicine
Flu vaccination cut hospitalizations in heart failure patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Ontario’s infant rotavirus immunization program found effective
MDedge Family Medicine
Take time to talk to vaccine refusers
MDedge Family Medicine
HPV vaccine doesn’t provide herd immunity or crossprotection
MDedge Family Medicine
Maternal flu shot offers far-reaching protection
MDedge Family Medicine
Time of day matters for flu vaccine administration in older adults
MDedge Family Medicine
Navigating pneumococcal vaccination in adults
MDedge Family Medicine
Time of day matters for flu vaccine administration in older adults
MDedge Family Medicine
HPV vaccine doesn’t provide herd immunity or cross-protection
MDedge Family Medicine