| Literature DB >> 30065192 |
Andrea-Ioana Beleni1, Stefan Borgmann2.
Abstract
Vaccination against mumps virus (MuV) (mostly measles-mumps-rubella) is routinely performed in more than 120 countries and has resulted in a distinct decrease of mumps incidence. However, alteration of mumps epidemiology has been observed in several countries after implementation of the vaccine but is sparsely documented. Moreover, outbreaks have occurred after starting vaccination, even in highly vaccinated populations. In the former German Democratic Republic (DDR) mumps was a notifiable disease but vaccination against mumps was not implemented. In the five eastern German states forming the DDR until 1990, mumps was not notifiable until 2001. Except for the lack of reporting between 1990⁻2000, data from Eastern Germany allow analysis of mumps epidemiology after initiating the vaccination campaign. For the period from 2001 to 2016 the data show that the incidence of mumps dropped notably after initiating vaccines, and was accompanied by an increase of the median age of patients with mumps. In Eastern Germany, no outbreaks were noted, while several outbreaks occurred in Western Germany, possibly due to a lower vaccination rate. Further literature analysis revealed that outbreaks were facilitated by waning immunity and crowding. Nevertheless, although vaccination prevented infection, the course of illness, once infected, was sometimes more complicated. In comparison to non-vaccinated populations, high rates of complicated courses occurred and were marked by orchitis, due to higher age of mumps patients. Therefore, refusing vaccination against mumps increases the risk of severe courses when living in a vaccinated population.Entities:
Keywords: Jeryl Lynn; Leningrad-Zagreb; Urabe; measles-mumps-rubella vaccination; orchitis; vaccination effectiveness; waning immunity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30065192 PMCID: PMC6121553 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15081618
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Structure of the mumps virus. The helical nucleocapsid consists of the nucleoprotein and RNA.
Measles, mumps, rubella (German pox) (MMR) and measles, mumps, rubella, varicella (chicken pox) vaccines (MMRV) available in Germany.
| Name | Manufacturer | Viruses | Mumps Virus Strain | Dosage (TCID50) | Costs (Germany) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MMR VAXPRO | MSD * | MMR | Jeryl Lynn | >20,000 | 48.79 Euro |
| Proquad | MSD * | MMRV | Jeryl Lynn | >20,000 | 103.28 Euro |
| Priorix | GSK ** | MMR | RIT 4385 | >25,000 | 51.30 Euro |
| Priorix Tetra | GSK ** | MMRV | RIT 4385 | >25,000 | 103.47 Euro |
| MMR II | MSD * | MMR | Jeryl Lynn | >12,500 | |
| M-M-RvaxPro | MSD * | MMR | Jeryl Lynn | >12,500 | |
| Tresivac | Serum Institute of India Ltd. | MMR | L-Zagreb | >5000 | 96.25 INR *** |
TCID50 = Tissue Culture Infection Dose 50. * Merck Sharp & Dohme. ** GlaxoSmithKline. *** Costs in India according to [25]. Data were accessed on 16 April 2018. Tresivac is only available if no vaccines approved for use in Germany can be supplied (§73(3) Medicinal Products Act in the version published on 12 December 2005 (Federal Law Gazette [BGBl.]) Part I p. 3394, last amended by Article 3 of the Law of 4 April 2016 (Federal Law Gazette I p. 569). INR = Indian Rupee. On 16 April 1 Euro was about 81 Indian Rupee.
Studies indicating waning immunity as a major risk factor of mumps in the MMR vaccination era. The studies were obtained through a “pubmed” search using the terms “mumps” AND “vaccination” AND “waning immunity” [42]. Data were accessed on 24 March 2018.
| Study | Observation | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rubin et al., 2008 [ | Sera of 88 children who had received their first MMR vaccine between 12 and 24 months and their second vaccine between 4 and 6 years of age had been examined. Sera for examination of MuV antibody titers (GMT) were collected a few days before and one month after the second vaccination and 10 years later when the children were 14–16 years of age. | ||||
| Lewnard et al., 2017 [ | In a meta-analysis it was calculated that immunity after receipt of any mumps vaccine persists on average 27.4 years (CI 16.7–51.1 years). Among vaccinated individuals 25% may lose protection within 7.9 years (CI: 4.7–14.7 years), 50% within 19.0 years (11.2–35.4 years), and 75% within 38.0 years (22.4–70.8 years). | ||||
| Davidkin et al., 2008 [ | The authors examined children after receipt of the second MMR. 20 years after vaccination only 40% of the children exhibited an antibody level interpreted as positive, 34% were equivocal and 26% were negative. Within 8 and 15 years after vaccination GMT decreased from 1:2491 to 1:767 to 1:597, respectively. The decline was more pronounced in males than in females. | ||||
| Cortese et al., 2008 [ | In an outbreak at a college in Kansas (USA) students vaccinated twice had been examined. Those who had received their second dose 10 years before the outbreak or earlier more likely got affected (OR 2.46, 95% CI: 1.25–4.82) | ||||
| Seagle et al., 2018 [ | From children having received the second MMR GMT were determined in an observation period of up to 12 years. Decline of GMT was 9.2% per year. | ||||
| LeBaron et al., 2009 [ | Children received the second MMR either at kindergarten or middle-school entry. Although the response to the vaccine was vigorous 12 years later antibody titers were similar to those measured before the second MMR. | ||||
| Briss et al., 1994 [ | In an outbreak at a high school in Tennessee RR was 2.9 (95% CI: 0.7–11.6) for students vaccinated before 1988 in comparison to those vaccinated later. | ||||
| Hersh et al., 1991 [ | Students vaccinated 4 years before an outbreak in Kansas (USA) had a higher attack rate than those vaccinated more recently (RR = 5.2, 95% CI: 0.6–30). | ||||
| Schwarz et al., 2010 [ | In an outbreak in Moldovia VE of 1 dose vaccination declined from 91% (95% CI: 88–92%) in 2-year-olds to 72% (95% CI: 70–74%) in 15- to 19-year-olds. | ||||
| Vygen et al., 2016 [ | In various mumps clusters in France the odds of mumps significantly increased for individuals vaccinated twice by 10% for every year that had passed since the second dose (aOR 1.10; 95% CI: 1.02–1.19). | ||||
| Cohen et al., 2007 [ | In England VE of 1/2 doses vaccination decreased with older age of children. | ||||
| Braeye et al., 2014 [ | In an outbreak at a university in Flanders (Belgium) risk of students vaccinated twice was examined. Those who had been vaccinated 10 years ago or less had a lower risk than students vaccinated more than 10 years ago (RR: 0.33, 95% CI: 0.10–1.02). | ||||
| Man et al., 2012 [ | VE for a single dose of mumps vaccine was | ||||
| Castilla et al., 2009 [ | In an outbreak in Spain affecting children older than 15 months risk of children who had received 2 vaccine doses was higher for children who had received the second dose 3 or more years before study enrollment (OR = 10.2, 95% CI: 1.5–70.7). | ||||
| Cardemil et al., 2017 [ | Attack rates of students during a mumps outbreak vaccinated twice depended on the time since the second vaccination: | ||||
| Time passed since the 2nd vaccination (years) | ≤2 | 3–12 | 13–15 | 16–23 | |
| Attack rate per 1000 population | 1.6 | 3.9 | 11.3 | 17.6 | |
VE = Vaccine effectiveness, CI = Confidence interval, RR = Relative risk, OR = Odds ratio, aOR = Adjusted odds ratio, GMT = Geometric mean titre.
Figure 2Vaccination effectiveness (%) after MMR-vaccination in published analyses. Studies were obtained by performing a “Pubmed” request [42] using the search terms “mumps” and “vaccination effectiveness” and “outbreak”. Data were accessed on 29 March 2018. Rhombuses: Effectiveness after 1 MMR dose. Circles: Effectiveness after 2 doses. Lines: 95%-Confidence intervalls. >13 = Effectiveness when second vaccine dose was >13 years ago. ≤13 = Effectiveness when second vaccine dose was ≤13 years ago. */**: Effectiveness against orchitis * or other complcations **. #: Effectiveness of 2 doses vs. 1 dose. ≤3 = Effectiveness when first vaccine dose was ≤3 years ago. >3 = Effectiveness when first vaccine dose was >3 years ago.
Figure 3Notifications of mumps cases in Western and Eastern Germany 2001–2016. In Western Germany notification of mumps started in 2013 and in Eastern Germany in 2001. (a) Number of affected individuals. (b) Incidence (cases/100,000 persons). (c) Percentage of male and female patients. (d) Seasonal distributions of mumps notifications. E = Eastern Germany. W = Western Germany. U = Unknown sex. Data were obtained from the Survstat tool of the German Robert-Koch-Institute (RKI) [74]. Data were accessed on 12 April 2018. Eastern Germany comprised Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania (Meckenburg-Vorpommern), Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringa. The other 11 federal states including Berlin were regarded as Western Germany.
Figure 4Age of notified patients suffering from mumps in Western and Eastern Germany. Age is given in interval of 5 years. (a) Age of affected patients in Western Germany in 2016. (b) Age of affected patients in Eastern Germany in 2002 and 2016. Left panels: Number of affected patients per 5-year interval. Rights panels: Mumps incidences (cases/100,000 persons) per 5-years interval. In Western Germany notification of mumps started in 2013 and in Eastern Germany in 2001. Data were obtained from the Survstat tool of the German Robert-Koch-Institute (RKI) [74]. Data were accessed on 12 April 2018. Eastern Germany comprised Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia. The other 11 federal states were regarded as Western Germany.