Vaccines Get New Scrutiny

<http://health.usnews.com/articles/health/childrens-health/2008/12/11/vaccines-get-new-scrutiny_print.htm>http://health.usnews.com/articles/health/childrens-health/2008/12/11/vaccines-get-new-scrutiny_print.htm
 



Vaccinations are claimed to be supersafe, but 
maybe not all at once, or for certain children

By 
<http://www.usnews.com/Topics/tag/Author/d/deborah_kotz/index.html>Deborah 
Kotz
Posted December 11, 2008

When Julie Austin decided to give her daughter 
the 
<http://www.usnews.com/blogs/heart-to-heart/2008/11/17/7-facts-you-need-to-know-about-hpv-and-gardasil.html>Gardasil
 
vaccine, she desperately wanted to protect Sara, 
then 15, from the human papillomavirus that had 
caused abnormal Pap smears in other family 
members. A day after the shot, however, Sara 
complained that she was dizzy and her head was 
pounding. "Her doctor said the migraine­the first 
one Sara ever experienced­could have been caused 
by Gardasil, but it faded the next day, so I 
didn't worry," says Austin, of Westfield, Mass. 
But the headache struck again after Sara's second 
shot­and again after her third. Then, the 
crushing pain became constant, causing Sara to 
miss school, quit the soccer team, and spend weekends in bed.
<http://www.usnews.com/articles/health/childrens-health/2008/12/11/vaccines-get-new-scrutiny_prin/photos/#1>
Sara Austin and her mom Julie at their house in Westfield MA.

Now worried. Might Gardasil be to blame for Sara Austin's severe headaches?
<http://www.usnews.com/articles/health/childrens-health/2008/12/11/vaccines-get-new-scrutiny_prin/photos/#2>
Graphic: Vaccine Risks



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Her mom now wonders if she made the right 
decision to vaccinate, even though the Food and 
Drug Administration 
<http://www.usnews.com/blogs/on-women/2008/10/24/gardasil-is-found-safe--but-some-families-wonder.html>insists
 
there's no reason to be worried about Gardasil. 
"We're monitoring the safety of the HPV vaccine 
very carefully, and the only adverse event that 
causes some concern is 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/fainting?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=syncope>syncope
 
or fainting," says Robert Ball, director of the 
FDA's office of biostatistics and epidemiology. 
And Gardasil's benefits can't be ignored: It 
protects against several dangerous HPV strains, 
including those responsible for the bulk of 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/cervical-cancer?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=cervical-cancers>cervical
 
cancers. But others in the medical establishment 
believe 
<http://www.usnews.com/blogs/on-women/2008/10/10/a-cautious-approach-to-gardasil-shot.html>Gardasil's
 
safety hasn't yet been proven and question why 
it's being recommended for girls as young as 9. 
"I certainly think it's wrong to give [Gardasil] 
to young teenage girls," contends pediatrician 
Catherine DeAngelis, editor in chief of the 
Journal of the American Medical Association. 
"<http://www.usnews.com/blogs/on-women/2008/7/2/is-hpv-vaccine-to-blame-for-a-teens-paralysis.html>What
 
are the risks? We won't know until it's given to 
millions of women." Karameh Hawash, the pediatric 
neurologist who recently treated Sara Austin with 
a prescription 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/migraine?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=migraine>migraine
 
drug, says she has seen two other girls stricken 
by daily headaches after receiving Gardasil shots.

Such uncertainty explains the decibel level of 
the battle cries both defending and attacking 
vaccines, which has risen in recent years along 
with the number of immunizations children face: 
<http://www.usnews.com/blogs/on-parenting/2008/5/27/a-new-tool-to-manage-your-childs-vaccine-schedule.html>38
 
shots against 15 diseases before kindergarten, 
compared with 11 shots against eight diseases 15 
years ago. There's no question that vaccines have 
been lifesaving: If every American child followed 
the recommended schedule, some 33,000 lives would 
be saved, 14 million 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/travelers-guide-to-avoiding-infectious-diseases?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=infections>infections
 
prevented, and $10 billion slashed from 
healthcare costs every year, according to the 
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But 
plenty of parents are unconvinced by the 
public-health mission, given other data­also from 
the CDC­showing that about 30,000 "adverse 
events" are reported every year by doctors and 
patients, of which 3,000 to 4,500 are serious 
enough to cause hospitalization, life-threatening 
illness, or even death. While the CDC's associate 
director for immunization safety, John Iskander, 
insists that "vaccines are extraordinarily safe 
medical products," he also acknowledges that the 
"trade-off between risks and benefits can be very difficult for parents."

Certainly, the government has taken steps through 
the years to make vaccines safer, replacing the 
live pertussis component of the 
diphtheria-tetanus-<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/pertussis?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=pertussis>pertussis
 
vaccine, which caused high 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/fever?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=fevers>fevers
 
and seizures in some children, with the inactive 
virus, for example. At the same time, though, 
officials are targeting an ever-expanding array 
of diseases. Some parents, fighting against the 
more-is-better philosophy, have gone so far as to 
organize 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/chickenpox?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=chickenpox>chickenpox
 
parties in the belief that infecting their kids 
the "natural way" is safer than vaccination with 
a weakened form of the virus; others, fearful 
that 
<http://www.usnews.com/articles/health/brain-and-behavior/2008/04/10/fighting-the-autism-vaccine-war.html>vaccines
 
have led to the rise in autism, choose not to 
vaccinate at all. Alarmed, the American Academy 
of Pediatrics in September formed an 
"immunization alliance" with other medical groups 
to push for kids to get all recommended vaccines 
on time. Public schools are pushing harder, too; 
one Maryland school district threatened to bring 
criminal charges against noncompliant parents.

Call for study. Far more quietly, the government 
is acknowledging that, at the moment, science 
doesn't know much about how many shots a kid can 
safely get at once and which children will be 
harmed. Last March, the family of 9-year-old 
Hannah Poling won a claim in the federal Vaccine 
Court (created to protect manufacturers from 
ruinous lawsuits) that the autism she developed 
as a toddler was most likely triggered by 
receiving five shots against nine diseases in one 
day; all told, the government has paid out more 
than $900 million for vaccine injuries over the 
past two decades. Since the Poling verdict, the 
government has called for new safety studies­to 
evaluate, say, whether 
<http://www.usnews.com/articles/health/childrens-health/2008/12/11/a-parents-guide-to-managing-vaccinations.html>gene
 
variations may make some kids more susceptible to 
vaccine injury. "If we can show that individuals 
of a certain genetic profile have a greater 
propensity for developing adverse events, we may 
want to screen everyone prior to vaccination," 
says Anthony Fauci, director of the National 
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, a 
key partner in the new initiative.

The concern that 
<http://health.usnews.com/articles/health/2008/01/09/on-parenting-genes--not-vaccines--linked-to-autism.html>vaccines
 
might trigger autism was first sparked a decade 
ago by a British study­since refuted­showing that 
the measles part of the 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/measles?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=measles>measles-mumps-rubella
 
shot caused intestinal inflammation and allowed 
toxins to enter the bloodstream and attack the 
central nervous system. Other experts speculated 
that thimerosal, a preservative containing 
mercury, was the culprit, and it was removed from 
children's vaccines in 2001 
(<http://www.usnews.com/blogs/on-women/2008/9/26/an-option-flu-vaccines-without-mercury-based-thimerosal.html>though
 
most flu vaccines still contain it). The CDC is 
currently conducting a study of 1,200 children to 
see whether a thimerosal-autism link really does 
exist, while some scientists wonder whether a 
small percentage of cases are, like Hannah 
Poling's, triggered by multiple vaccinations. 
Poling was found to have mitochondrial disease, a 
nerve disorder causing autismlike symptoms that 
appeared to be brought on by her immunizations. 
"Mitochondrial disease often occurs in the later 
stages of a viral illness, and it's proper 
reasoning to think that vaccines could do what 
viruses do," in terms of immune reactions, says 
neurologist Bruce Cohen, a mitochondrial disease 
expert at the Cleveland Clinic.

A search for markers. The answer could lie in 
gene studies. "We'd like to know if there are 
particular markers that signal undetectable 
diseases like a subclinical mitochrondrial 
disorder," says Fauci. A 2007 study already found 
that certain mutations affect a person's 
susceptibility to fevers after smallpox 
vaccination; the researchers say they may also 
predict other responses, like 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/febrile-seizures?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=febrile-seizures>febrile
 
seizures linked to the 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/multumcontent/measles-mumps-rubella-virus-vaccine?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=MMR-vaccine>MMR
 
vaccine.

It's important to keep the risks in perspective: 
More than 95 percent of kids sail through their 
shots with, at most, a little fussiness, 
according to Renee Jenkins, president of the 
American Academy of Pediatrics. A small 
percentage experience an overactive immune 
response like redness, swelling, or pain at the 
injection site, high fever, or extreme 
irritability, but severe complications like 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/anaphylaxis?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=anaphylactic-shock>anaphylactic
 
shock are extremely rare 
(<http://health.usnews.com/articles/health/childrens-health/2008/12/11/vaccines-get-new-scrutiny/photos/#2>see
 
graphic). Still, how to account for the fact that 
once familiar diseases like measles and mumps 
have become nearly as rare as the adverse reactions?

"It's one thing to take a risk [with a 
medication] if you actually have a disease, but 
taking a risk when the goal is prevention of a 
very rare disease is less tolerable," says Arthur 
Caplan, director of the Center for Bioethics at 
the University of Pennsylvania. 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/multumcontent/meningococcal-conjugate-vaccine?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=Menactra>Menactra,
 
for example, protects against bacterial 
meningitis, which strikes about 1 in 100,000 
people per year and kills about 1 in a million. 
But it also may cause Guillain-Barré syndrome, a 
temporary but severe 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/galecontent/paralysis?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=paralysis>paralysis
 
triggered by an overactive immune system, in 1 to 
2 teens per million who are vaccinated, according to Iskander.

New vaccines like Menactra and Gardasil pose 
unknown safety risks because, like any drug 
submitted for FDA approval, they only need to be 
tested in several thousand people. "These trials 
simply aren't big enough to detect rare events 
that only come to light after 1 million or more 
doses are distributed," says Iskander. The 
original vaccine against rotavirus, which causes 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/diarrhea?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=severe-diarrhea>severe
 
diarrhea and dehydration in infants, was tested 
on fewer than 1,300 American infants before it 
was approved in 1998; a year later, after being 
given to 1.5 million babies, RotaShield was 
pulled from the market because 13 reported cases 
of severe intestinal blockages were attributed to 
the vaccine. The 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/multumcontent/meningococcal-polysaccharide-vaccine?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=meningitis-vaccine>meningitis
 
vaccine Menactra was studied in just over 7,500 
people before it was approved in 2005 for adults 
and kids over age 11. It wasn't until last 
February, after 15 million doses had been 
administered, that the CDC announced a "small 
increased risk" of Guillain-Barré that needs to be studied further.

Hit or miss. The CDC's current system of 
detecting rare problems is hit or miss. Perhaps 
the crudest tool is the Vaccine Adverse Event 
Reporting system, which relies on doctors and 
patients to file a report if they suspect 
symptoms have been caused by a vaccine. Many 
problems filed with VAERS have nothing to do with 
vaccinations; real adverse events often go 
unreported. A better monitoring system, the 
agency's Vaccine Safety Datalink, regularly scans 
5.5 million anonymous health records provided by 
managed care organizations to see whether new 
vaccines are associated with a spike in certain 
conditions. Still, even the Datalink database 
doesn't hold enough teens to definitively prove a 
causal link between Guillain-Barré and Menactra, 
says Harvard Medical School professor and vaccine 
researcher Richard Platt. He and his colleagues 
recently established a surveillance system that 
includes 50 million people and are using it to 
check for Menactra-related Guillain-Barré cases 
in more than 9 million young people ages 11 to 
21. Platt expects to publish results sometime in 2009.

This larger surveillance system could also help 
determine whether there's a limit to the number 
of immunizations a baby can safely have at once. 
The Institute of Medicine concluded in 2002 that 
giving babies 20 shots against 11 diseases before 
age 2 did not raise the risk of juvenile diabetes 
(thought to be a result of an immune system in 
overdrive). But the IOM decided there wasn't 
enough evidence to prove or disprove an increased 
risk of allergies and 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/asthma?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=asthma>asthma.
 
Efforts are underway in Congress to fund a 
well-designed study comparing vaccinated kids 
against those who remain unvaccinated to see if 
there are differences in autism rates.

Avoiding immunizations altogether certainly isn't 
a good solution for families, because 
meningococcal, pertussis, and other infections 
could sharply rise if vaccination rates drop low 
enough­putting any unvaccinated child at risk. 
Measles cases rose recently in counties with the 
lowest vaccination rates. So, parents who choose 
not to vaccinate better hope that other parents 
aren't following their lead. Certain approaches, 
though, can help 
<http://www.usnews.com/articles/health/childrens-health/2008/12/11/a-parents-guide-to-managing-vaccinations.html>minimize
 
risks without leaving children unprotected.

While 
<http://www.usnews.com/articles/health/childrens-health/2008/12/11/a-government-call-for-vaccine-research.html>researchers
 
seek answers, some families are left wondering if 
their tragedies are vaccine-caused. Philip 
Tetlock, an organizational behavior professor at 
University of California­Berkeley's Haas School 
of Business, is desperately trying to determine 
if his 14-year-old daughter Jenny's juvenile 
<http://usnews.healthline.com/adamcontent/amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis?utm_medium=usnews&utm_campaign=article&utm_source=hlinks&utm_term=amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis>amyotrophic
 
lateral sclerosis (aka Lou Gehrig's disease) is a 
result of her Gardasil vaccination. Another young 
woman, Whitney Baird, 22, died in August from 
this disease, just 13 months after receiving 
Gardasil. Both were healthy before getting the 
shot, and the condition is extraordinarily rare, 
affecting just 1 in every 2 million people. The 
cases have been reviewed by CDC researchers who, 
says Iskander, "didn't feel that vaccines were 
the likely trigger." Yet Barbara Shapiro, an 
associate professor of neurology at Case Western 
Reserve University School of Medicine who has 
also pored over Jenny's and Whitney's medical 
records, believes the cases raise red flags.

Often, parents' only recourse is to try to 
collect damages in the Vaccine Court, which is 
expected to rule on a series of autism cases any 
day. Tawny Buck had to fight hard to convince the 
court that her infant daughter Quincy's seizures, 
which left the now-13-year-old with severe brain 
damage, were caused by a reaction to the live 
pertussis vaccine. Currently serving in a 
government vaccine-safety working group, Buck, of 
Wasilla, Alaska, hopes her experience can help 
make a difference when it comes to setting 
research priorities for the CDC. "Vaccines are 
important for keeping our communities safe, but 
they have problems," she says. "What happened to 
my daughter can't be forgotten."

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