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Long-term complications and risk of other serious infections following invasive Haemophilus influenzae serotype b disease in vaccinated children
Authors:Shamez Ladhani  Paul T. Heath  Rashna J. Aibara  Mary E. Ramsay  Mary P.E. Slack  Martin L. Hibberd  Andrew J. Pollard  E. Richard Moxon  Robert Booy
Affiliation:1. Academic Unit of Paediatrics, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, London, United Kingdom;2. Vaccine Institute and Division of Child Health, St George''s, University of London, United Kingdom;3. Department of Paediatrics, Central Middlesex Hospital, London, United Kingdom;4. Centre for Infections, Health Protection Agency, London, United Kingdom;5. Infectious Diseases Unit, Genome Institute of Singapore, Republic of Singapore;6. Oxford Vaccine Group, Department of Paediatrics, University of Oxford, United Kingdom;g National Centre for Immunisation Research & Surveillance, University of Sydney, Australia
Abstract:This study describes the long-term complications in children with Haemophilus influenzae serotype b (Hib) vaccine failure and to determine their risk of other serious infections. The families of 323 children with invasive Hib disease after appropriate vaccination (i.e. vaccine failure) were contacted to complete a questionnaire relating to their health and 260 (80.5%) completed the questionnaire. Of the 124 children with meningitis, 18.5% reported serious long-term sequelae and a further 12.1% of parents attributed other problems to Hib meningitis. Overall, 14% (32/231 cases) of otherwise healthy children and 59% (17/29 cases) of children with an underlying condition developed at least one other serious infection requiring hospital admission. In a Poisson regression model, the risk of another serious infection was independently associated with the presence of an underlying medical condition (incidence risk ratio (IRR) 7.6, 95% CI 4.8–12.1; p < 0.0001), both parents having had a serious infection (IRR 4.1, 95% CI 1.6–10.3; p = 0.003), requirement of more than two antibiotic courses per year (IRR 2.3, 95% CI 1.4–3.6; p = 0.001) and the presence of a long-term complication after Hib infection (IRR 1.8, 95% CI 1.1–3.1; p = 0.03). Thus, rates of long-term sequelae in children with vaccine failure who developed Hib meningitis are similar to those in unvaccinated children in the pre-vaccine era. One in seven otherwise healthy children (14%) with Hib vaccine failure will go on to suffer another serious infection requiring hospital admission in childhood, which is higher than would be expected for the UK paediatric population.
Keywords:Conjugate vaccine   Meningitis   Sequelae
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