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Keeping up with immunizations for adults

Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine. 2014 October;81(10):608-612 | 10.3949/ccjm.81gr.14004
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ABSTRACTThis paper discusses recommendations from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices for vaccinating adults against influenza, tetanus, measles, mumps, rubella, varicella, hepatitis A and B, human papillomavirus, shingles (zoster), pneumonia, and meningitis.

KEY POINTS

  • Information on immunization schedules, including an app for mobile devices, is available at www.cdc.gov/vaccines/schedules/hcp/adult.html.
  • Vaccination rates in adults are low, and appropriate vaccinations should be encouraged. The electronic medical record can help remind us when vaccinations are due.
  • The live-attenuated vaccines, ie, zoster, varicella, and combined measles, mumps, and rubella, are contraindicated during pregnancy and in immunocompromised patients.

MEASLES, MUMPS, RUBELLA FOR THOSE BORN AFTER 1957

Measles remains a problem in the developing world, with an estimated average of 330 deaths daily. The number of cases fell 99% in the United States following the vaccination program that started in the early 1960s. Before the measles vaccine was available, an estimated 90% of children acquired measles by age 15.

The clinical syndrome consists of fever, conjunctivitis, cough, rash, and the characteristic Koplik spots—small white spots occurring on the inside of cheeks early in the disease course.

During the first 5 months of 2014, the CDC reported 334 cases of measles in the United States in 18 states, with most people affected being unvaccinated.3 In comparison, from 2001 to 2008, the number of cases averaged 56 annually.

Many of the recent cases were associated with infections brought from the Philippines. The increased number of measles cases underscores the need for vaccination to prevent measles and its complications.

Mumps is an acute, self-limited viral syndrome, and parotitis is the hallmark. Vaccination led to a 99% decline in cases in the United States. Although complications are rare, they can be serious and include orchitis (with risk of sterility), meningoencephalitis, and deafness.

Mumps outbreaks still occur, especially in close-contact settings such as schools, colleges, and camps. During the first half of 2014, central Ohio had more than 400 cases linked to The Ohio State University.

Rubella, also known as German measles, is a generally mild infection but is associated with congenital rubella syndrome. If a woman is infected with rubella in the first trimester of pregnancy, the risk of miscarriage is greater than 80%, as is the risk of birth defects, including hearing loss, developmental delay, growth retardation, and cardiac and eye defects.

Recommendations for MMR vaccination. People born before 1957 are considered immune to measles and usually to mumps. Health care workers should document immunity before assuming no vaccination is needed.

People born in 1957 or after should have one dose of MMR vaccine unless immunity is documented or unless there is a contraindication such as immunosuppression. A second dose is recommended for those born in or after 1957 who are considered to be at high risk: eg, health care workers, students entering college, and international travelers. The second dose should be given 4 weeks after the first.

Women of childbearing age should be screened for immunity to rubella. Susceptible women should receive MMR, although not during pregnancy and not if they may get pregnant within 4 weeks.

The patient described above was born before 1957, and so he is probably immune to measles and mumps.

HEPATITIS B FOR THOSE AT RISK

Hepatitis B vaccination is recommended for all adolescents and adults at increased risk: eg, men who have sex with men, intravenous drug users, people with multiple sexual partners, health care workers, patients with end-stage renal disease on hemodialysis, patients with chronic liver disease, and those with diabetes (age < 60).

Immunization consists of a series of three shots (at 0, 1–2, and 4–6 months). Booster doses are not recommended. Postvaccination testing for immunity is available and is recommended for health care workers, patients on hemodialysis, patients with HIV infection or who are otherwise immunocompromised, and sexual partners of people who are positive for hepatitis B surface antigen. Nonresponders should be revaccinated with the entire three-shot schedule. Hepatitis B vaccination is safe in pregnancy.

The patient described above has diabetes and so is a candidate for vaccination.

HEPATITIS A: A SLIGHTLY DIFFERENT RISK GROUP

Hepatitis A vaccination is recommended only for at-risk populations: international travelers; intravenous drug users; men who have sex with men; patients with clotting disorders, chronic liver disease, or hepatitis C infection; international adoptees; and laboratory personnel working with hepatitis A virus. The vaccination is given in two doses with a minimum interval of 6 months between doses.

A hepatitis A and hepatitis B combination vaccine (Twinrix) is also available. It is given in three doses, at 0, 1, and 6 months.

ANNUAL INFLUENZA VACCINE FOR ALL

In 2010, the ACIP recommended a policy of universal annual vaccination for everyone age 6 months and older. Some patients are at especially high risk themselves or are at high risk of exposing others and so are given higher priority during vaccine shortages—ie, patients who are immunosuppressed or have other medical risk factors, health care workers, household members of at-risk patients, and pregnant women after 13 weeks of gestation.

There are few contraindications, so almost everyone should be encouraged to receive the influenza vaccine. The flu shot does not cause the flu, but it may cause soreness at the injection site. Those with severe egg allergy should not receive the standard flu shot; a recombinant vaccine that does not use egg culture is available.

The standard flu shot is an inactivated influenza vaccine. In the past, most formulations were trivalent, but quadrivalent formulations are becoming more common. Special high-dose formulations are believed to elicit a better immune response and can be recommended for people over age 65. Intradermal and intramuscular formulations are available.

An intranasal live-attenuated influenza vaccine is also available and may be used for people ages 2 through 49. It should not be given to immunosuppressed people or to pregnant women.

Our patient should get a flu shot.