Literature DB >> 22664224

Febrile events including convulsions following the administration of four brands of 2010 and 2011 inactivated seasonal influenza vaccine in NZ infants and children: the importance of routine active safety surveillance.

Helen Petousis-Harris1, Tracey Poole, Nikki Turner, Gary Reynolds.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate and compare rates of febrile events, including febrile convulsion, following immunisation with four brands of inactivated 2010 and 2011 influenza vaccine in NZ infants and children.
DESIGN: Retrospective telephone surveys of parents of infants and children who received at least one dose of the vaccines of interest.
SETTING: 184 NZ General Practices who received the vaccines of interest. PARTICIPANTS: Recipients of 4088 doses of trivalent inactivated vaccines Fluvax(®), Vaxigrip(®), Influvac(®) and Fluarix(®) and/or monovalent Celvapan. Vaccinees were identified via the electronic Practice Management System and contacted consecutively. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Primary outcome was febrile convulsive seizure. Secondary outcomes were presence of fever plus other organ system specific symptoms.
RESULTS: The parental response rate was 99%. Of 4088 doses given, 865 were Fluvax(®), 2571 Vaxigrip(®), 204 Influvac(®), 438 Fluarix(®) and 10 Celvapan. Three febrile convulsions followed Fluvax(®), a rate of 35 per 10,000 doses. No convulsions occurred following any dose of the other vaccines. There were nine febrile events that included rigors, all following Fluvax(®). Fever occurred significantly more frequently following administration of Fluvax(®) compared with the other brands of vaccines (p<0.0001) and Fluvax recipients were more likely to seek medical attention. Influvac(®) also had higher rates of febrile reactions (OR 0.54, 0.36-0.81) than the other two brands Vaxigrip(®) (OR 0.21, 0.16-0.27) and Fluarix(®) (OR 0.10, 0.05-0.20). After multivariable analysis vaccine, European ethnicity and second dose of vaccine were significantly associated with reporting of fever within 24h of vaccination.
CONCLUSIONS: Influenza vaccines have different rates of reactogenicity in children which varies between ethnic groups. High rates of febrile convulsions and reactions in children receiving Fluvax(®) and to a lesser extent the higher fever rates in those receiving Influvac(®) compared with the other two brands of influenza vaccines in this study suggests that reactogenicity profiles need to be considered prior to national policy advice each season. The risk-benefit profile in children might not be equally favourable for all licensed paediatric influenza vaccines. More attention needs to be given to comparative research for all trivalent seasonal vaccines, and with all strain changes.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22664224     DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2012.05.052

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vaccine        ISSN: 0264-410X            Impact factor:   3.641


  8 in total

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2.  Risk of fever after pediatric trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine and 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine.

Authors:  Melissa S Stockwell; Karen Broder; Philip LaRussa; Paige Lewis; Nadira Fernandez; Devindra Sharma; Angela Barrett; Jose Sosa; Claudia Vellozzi
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Review 4.  Methodological frontiers in vaccine safety: qualifying available evidence for rare events, use of distributed data networks to monitor vaccine safety issues, and monitoring the safety of pregnancy interventions.

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5.  Responding to vaccine safety signals during pandemic influenza: a modeling study.

Authors:  Judith C Maro; Dennis G Fryback; Tracy A Lieu; Grace M Lee; David B Martin
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6.  Safety of Intranasal Quadrivalent Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine (QLAIV) in Children and Adolescents: A Pilot Prospective Cohort Study in England.

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Review 7.  The manufacturing process should remain the focus for severe febrile reactions in children administered an Australian inactivated influenza vaccine during 2010.

Authors:  Jean Li-Kim-Moy; Robert Booy
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8.  Safety of Tdap vaccine in pregnant women: an observational study.

Authors:  Helen Petousis-Harris; Tony Walls; Donna Watson; Janine Paynter; Patricia Graham; Nikki Turner
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  8 in total

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