| Literature DB >> 16271153 |
Jennifer B Rosen1, Joel G Breman, Charles R Manclark, Bruce D Meade, William E Collins, Hans O Lobel, Pierre Saliou, Jacquelin M Roberts, Pierre Campaoré, Mark A Miller.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute malaria has been associated with a decreased antibody response to tetanus and diphtheria toxoids, meningococcal, salmonella, and Hib vaccines. Interest in giving malaria drug therapy and prevention at the time of childhood immunizations has increased greatly following recent trials of intermittent preventive therapy during infancy (IPTi), stimulating this re-analysis of unpublished data. The effect of malaria chemoprophylaxis on vaccine response was studied following administration of measles vaccines and diphtheria-tetanus-whole cell pertussis (DTP) vaccines.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16271153 PMCID: PMC1308854 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-4-53
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Malaria chemoprophylaxis and response to childhood vaccinations: flow chart of study design. Number of subjects excluded from analysis due to moving, death or lack of available sera: 1. 4 (37 excluded due to detectable pre-vaccination measles antibody titers) 2. 163 3. 177 4. 162 5. 70 6. 66 7. 36 8. 31 (68 excluded due to detectable pre-vaccination measles antibody titers, 18 excluded due to receipt of some prophylaxis)
Characteristics of children qualifying for analyses at vaccination by vaccine type, gender, age and nutrition (measured by the Weight-for-Height Z-score at vaccination) for the prophylaxis (CH+) and no prophylaxis (CH-) groups.
| 177 | 53 | 274 | 54 | 0.82 | ||
| 178 | 33.7 (15.2) | 274 | 33.7 (18.1) | 0.97 | ||
| 162 | -0.65 (0.92) | 247 | -0.54 (1.01) | 0.28 | ||
| 310 | 48 | 204 | 53 | 0.04 | ||
| 309 | 32.3 (14.9) | 204 | 32 (17.7) | 0.29 | ||
| 210 | -0.88 (0.98) | 37 | -0.78 (0.84) | 0.29 | ||
* SD Standard Deviation
Seroconversion to measles, diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis vaccinations in the prophylaxis (CH+) and no prophylaxis (CH-) groups
| 127/137(93)* | 180/187 (96) | 0.16* | 0.96 (0.91–1.02)* | |
| 109/116 (94) | 0.36 | 0.98 (0.92–1.03) | ||
| 108/147(73)* | 116/135 (86) | 0.26* | 0.86 (0.76–0.96)*‡ | |
| 38/ 46 (83) | 0.59 | 0.96 (0.83–1.12) | ||
| 104/134(77)* | 126/138 (91) | 0.08* | 0.85 (0.77–0.94)*‡ | |
| 41/43 (95) | 0.39 | 1.04 (0.96–1.14) | ||
| 63/148(43) * | 113/168 (67) | <0.01* | 0.63 (0.51–0.78)* | |
| 17/44 (39) | <0.01 | 0.57 (0.39–0.85) | ||
* top rows include all CH+ children (bottom rows include only those CH+ children who met criteria for strict compliance)
† seroconversion is any increase in titer from a negative baseline for measles; seroresponse is a four-fold or greater rise in titer for diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis
‡ the discordance between the P-value and confidence interval arises because the latter was calculated from a separate analysis which did not adjust for the random effect of village
Figure 2Pre and post-vaccination Geometric Mean Titers (GMTs) and Geometric Mean Fold Rise (GMR) for prophylaxis (CH+) and no prophylaxis (CH-) groups. P values listed correspond to the difference in GMR between the two groups. GMTs expressed as log2. Children included in the CH+ group met criteria for compliance for chemoprophylaxis. (A) Measles vaccine: GMR for CH+ and CH- groups does not differ significantly. (B) Diphtheria vaccine: GMR for CH+ and CH- groups does not differ significantly. (C) Tetanus vaccine: GMR for CH+ and CH- groups does not differ significantly. (D) Pertussis vaccine: GMR is significantly > for CH- group.