Wednesday, October 22, 2008

UK: Considering A `Prime Directive'

 

 

# 2410

 

 

The idea of `priming'  health care worker's immune system with an H5 vaccine now is gaining acceptance, at least in some quarters. 

 

The idea is, since it takes two shots roughly a month apart to confer a reasonable level of immunity, it makes sense to `prime'  high risk individuals with the first shot before a pandemic erupts. 

 

They can then receive a `booster' shot when a pandemic breaks out.  

 

Recent studies have shown that a booster given even years after an initial inoculation can quickly boost immunity. 

 

For more on this, see  Study: Bird Flu Vaccine -- A Double Jab Will Do Ya

 


Japan is seriously considering using millions of doses of H5N1 vaccine which will expire next year to inoculate health care workers and first responders.    They recently completed a trial where 6,000 people received the experimental vaccine.

 

 

Now we get this article in The  Nursing Times,  a UK based weekly magazine for nurses, that advocates priming Britain's nurses with the currently available pre-pandemic vaccine.

 

 

 

 

 

Frontline nurses should be 'primed' now against possible flu pandemic

  • Published: 21 October 2008 12:10
  • Last Updated: 21 October 2008 12:10
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High-risk healthcare staff should receive staggered vaccinations to protect them in the event of pandemic influenza, UK researchers have suggested.

 

 

The staff who are most likely to come into contact with infected patients should be given an initial injection of the H5 vaccine now to 'prime' their immune system, the team from the University of Leicester said.

 

If a pandemic takes place, vaccinated staff could then be given a booster to protect them from the virus much more quickly, the team added.

 

The researchers studied outcomes of people who received a low-dose booster jab following initial vaccination with a strain of the H5 vaccine, compared with those receiving both vaccines together.

 

Over 80% of people who had the initial vaccine followed by the booster had an 'excellent response' to all strains of the H5 virus within one week, regardless of the strain with which they had been primed.

 

'Unprimed' subjects needed two doses and it took six weeks for them to produce protective levels of antibody.

 

Lead study author Iain Stephenson, consultant in infectious diseases at Leicester Royal Infirmary, said: 'Even if the strain of the virus changes, proactive priming followed by a booster gives a very rapid immune response.

 

'We should offer proactive priming to all healthcare staff at increased risk using whatever stockpiled vaccine we have.'

 

A spokesperson for the Department of Health said: 'These results suggest that we may have a greater flexibility in vaccination regimes than previously thought.'

 

He added: 'The balance of the risks and benefits of vaccinating with a type of avian influenza that might never cause a pandemic, compared to the potential adverse effects that might emerge with widespread use of a vaccine, is unanswered.'