From the Journals

PCV effective against HNIs, pHNIs that require hospitalization in immunized children


 

FROM THE PEDIATRIC INFECTIOUS DISEASE JOURNAL

Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCV) in immunized children show effectiveness against head and neck infections (HNIs), especially against pneumococcal HNIs (pHNIs) that require hospitalization, according to Tal Marom, MD, of Tel Aviv University, Zerifin, Israel, and associates.

In a retrospective study, researchers identified children aged 0-16 years who were hospitalized with HNIs between Jan. 1, 2007 and Dec. 31, 2014. HNIs accounted for 2.5%-4.7% of admissions to the pediatric department, and there was a downward trend in the incidence in the post-PCV years, compared with previous years. Of the 820 children admitted with HNIs, 11% children were identified with pHNIs, 5% with acute otitis media, 4% with acute mastoiditis, and 2% with meningitis; there were no cases of pneumococcal acute bacterial sinusitis or pneumococcal head and neck abscesses. In 2009-2010 (considered as the “transition years,” in which both PCV7 and PCV13 were implemented in Israel), pHNIs incidence sharply decreased, from 7/1,000 to 1.74/1,000 hospitalized children per year, because of a 55% reduction of pneumococcal acute otitis media episodes. There also was an additional decrease observed in the post-PCV years of 2012-2014 (1.62/1,000 hospitalized children per year).

It was noted that unimmunized children were more likely to suffer from pneumococcal infections than immunized children (P = .001). There were no significant differences in the clinical presentation of these two groups, except for the need for surgery, which was significantly greater in immunized children (P = .042).

“The findings of the current study provide further evidence of PCV effectiveness against HNIs in PCV immunized children, and particularly against pHNI which required hospitalization,” Dr. Marom and associates concluded. “A substantial reduction in the all-cause HNIs incidence, and more specifically in pHNIs, in PCV immunized children who required hospitalization, was evident in the present study. This was also followed by a significant reduction in [acute otitis media] rates and to a much lesser extent, in [acute mastoiditis] and meningitis rates.”

Find the full study in the Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal (2016. doi: 10.1097/INF.0000000000001425).

Recommended Reading

Autism risk not increased by maternal influenza infection during pregnancy
MDedge Family Medicine
Presume parents want HPV vaccines for tweens
MDedge Family Medicine
Targeted interventions aid in HPV vaccination uptake
MDedge Family Medicine
Influences and beliefs on vaccine hesitancy remain complex
MDedge Family Medicine
Only topical lidocaine consistently eased infant vaccine pain
MDedge Family Medicine
Meningococcal conjugate vaccination may be associated with increased risk of Bell’s palsy
MDedge Family Medicine
Children in Taiwan being undervaccinated for pertussis
MDedge Family Medicine
IPV boost after initial OPV offers sustained protection to at least 11 months
MDedge Family Medicine
Historic HIV vaccine efficacy study underway in South Africa
MDedge Family Medicine
Statin use increases risk of herpes zoster
MDedge Family Medicine