Practice Alert

ACIP update: 2 new recommendations for meningococcal vaccine

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

TABLE 2
Rates* of serogroup C, Y, and W-135 meningococcal disease

Age group (y)
Year11-19≥20
2004-20050.230.16
2006-20070.270.22
2008-20090.140.21
*Annual rate per 100,000.
Serogroup A disease is too rare for inclusion here.
Source: Cohn A. Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices Meeting; October 27, 2010.2

TABLE 3
Average annual number of cases of C, Y, and W-135 meningococcal disease

Age group (y)2000-20042005-2009Change
11-144612-74%
15-1810677-27%
19-226252-16%
Total (11-22)214141-34%
Source: Cohn A. Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices Meeting; October 27, 2010.2

ACIP weighed the options for a booster dose
Three options were presented at the October 2010 ACIP meeting:

  • Option 1: No change to the current recommendation for vaccination of 11- to 12-year-olds. Wait and see what happens to disease incidence over several more years.
  • Option 2: Move the age of vaccination to 15 years with no booster. This would allow protection to persist through the years of highest risk (16-21 years).
  • Option 3: Keep the recommendation for vaccination at ages 11 to 12 years, and add a booster dose at age 16.

The first option was the least cost effective: $281,000/quality-adjusted life year (QALY). The second option was the most cost effective at $121,000/QALY. The last option came out in the middle: $157,000/QALY, but it would save the most lives—9 more per year compared with Option 2.1 There is, however, a caveat with regard to the cost-effectiveness estimates. The numbers were obtained using incidence data from the year 2000; incidence has declined since then, and cost-effectiveness estimates would be much less favorable using today’s rates.

These issues were discussed at length, and the decision to add a booster dose at age 16 was made on a close vote. This decision illustrates how difficult vaccine policy-making has become in recent years, when choices must be made about recommending safe, effective, and expensive vaccines to prevent illnesses that are both rare and serious.

The new MCV4 recommendations will be added to the child immunization schedule for 2011.

The take-home message for family physicians is to strive to increase the proportion of 11- to 12-year-olds who are fully vaccinated and in 2011 to begin to advise those who are between the ages of 16 and 20 years of the recommendation for a booster dose of MCV4.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Flu Vaccination Rates Were Stagnant for Infants
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA Approves Chemical-Poisoning Antidote for Kids
MDedge Family Medicine
AAN Calls for Concussion Experts in Youth Sports
MDedge Family Medicine
ACIP: Give Meningococcal Booster Dose at 16
MDedge Family Medicine
Use Risk Communication to Answer Parents' Environmental Questions
MDedge Family Medicine
What’s the best approach to diagnosing food allergies in infants?
MDedge Family Medicine
Your guide to the new pneumococcal vaccine for children
MDedge Family Medicine
Give your sports physicals a performance boost
MDedge Family Medicine
What’s causing your young patient’s hip pain?
MDedge Family Medicine
Screen teens for depression—it’s quicker than you think
MDedge Family Medicine