Showing posts with label miscarriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label miscarriage. Show all posts

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Two Studies On The 2009 Pandemic Flu Vaccine & Pregnancy

image

Photo Credit – CDC

 

 

# 6877

 

We’ve known for a long time that influenza and pregnancy are a bad combination - one that can endanger both the mother and unborn child’s life – and that women are more susceptible to influenza when they are pregnant.

 

During the 1918 pandemic an abnormally high number of pregnant women died from the influenza, and those that survived endured a very high miscarriage rate.  Again, during the much milder 1957 Asian Flu, pregnant women reportedly suffered disproportionately higher mortality rates than non-pregnant women of the same age.

 

Historical reviews of both events are available in a Perspective, written by 3 CDC physicians (Sonja A. Rasmussen,  Denise J. Jamieson, Joseph S. Bresee) and published in the CDC Journal of EID article, Pandemic Influenza and Pregnant Women in February of 2008.

 

True to form, the 2009 H1N1 pandemic saw similarly high rates of influenza complications among pregnant women. 

 

An open access research article in the BMJ in 2011 (Perinatal outcomes after maternal 2009/H1N1 infection: national cohort study) found that pregnant women who were admitted to the hospital with an  H1N1 infection experienced a 3 to 4 times higher rate of preterm birth, 4 to 5 times greater risk of stillbirth, and a 4 to 6 times higher rate of neonatal death.

 

Over the past decade we’ve also seen a handful of studies tentatively linking prenatal exposure to influenza (or an influenza-like-illness) with a variety of child and adolescent development disorders (see Of Pregnancy, Flu & Autism).

 

All of which explains why the CDC, the WHO, and other public health stress the importance of seasonal flu vaccination for pregnant women.

 

Despite all of this evidence of harm from influenza - there remains some reluctance among pregnant women to get the shot - in part due to the persistent anti-vaccine rhetoric on the internet and in the media.

 

Despite studies showing exactly the opposite effect, during and after the 2009 H1N1 pandemic there were unfounded claims that the 2009 H1N1 vaccine was responsible for `thousands’ of miscarriages.

 

Our first stop then is a study that recently appeared in the NEJM that looked at a large cohort of pregnant Norwegian women during the pandemic, and found that while influenza increased the rate of fetal deaths, that vaccination did not, and may have reduced the number fetal deaths.

 

Risk of Fetal Death after Pandemic Influenza Virus Infection or Vaccination

Siri E. Håberg, M.D., Ph.D., Lill Trogstad, M.D., Ph.D., Nina Gunnes, Ph.D., Allen J. Wilcox, M.D., Ph.D., Håkon K. Gjessing, Ph.D., Sven Ove Samuelsen, Ph.D., Anders Skrondal, Ph.D., Inger Cappelen, Ph.D., Anders Engeland, Ph.D., Preben Aavitsland, M.D., Steinar Madsen, M.D., Ingebjørg Buajordet, Ph.D., Kari Furu, Ph.D., Per Nafstad, M.D., Ph.D., Stein Emil Vollset, M.D., Dr.P.H., Berit Feiring, M.Sc.Pharm., Hanne Nøkleby, M.D., Per Magnus, M.D., Ph.D., and Camilla Stoltenberg, M.D., Ph.D.

N Engl J Med 2013; 368:333-340J anuary 24, 2013 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1207210

Conclusions

Pandemic influenza virus infection in pregnancy was associated with an increased risk of fetal death. Vaccination during pregnancy reduced the risk of an influenza diagnosis.

 

Vaccination itself was not associated with increased fetal mortality and may have reduced the risk of influenza-related fetal death during the pandemic. (Funded by the Norwegian Institute of Public Health.)

 

This was not the first study to show the safety of the 2009 pandemic flu vaccination in pregnancy, only the latest. 

 

Last year, in BMJ: H1N1 Vaccination & Fetal Death Rates, we looked at a study on a large cohort of pregnant women from Demark that reassuringly found no increase in miscarriage among those who received the 2009 H1N1 vaccine.

 

We saw similar results in 2010 (see Hong Kong: No Increase In Fetal Death Among Vaccine Recipients).  For more studies on the safety of flu vaccines in pregnancy, see IDSA: Flu Vaccines In Pregnancy.

 


Our second study, published overnight in PLoS One, looks at transplacental transfer of antibodies following vaccination with the AS03A-Adjuvanted H1N1 2009 Vaccine.

 

As infants are highly susceptible to influenza, and vaccination is not recommended before the age of 6 months, the receipt of vaccine derived antibodies from the mother while still in the womb might provide needed protection.

 

This study looked for antibodies in cord blood samples taken from babies shortly after delivery from 77 vaccinated and 27 unvaccinated women during the fall and winter of 2009.

 

Multi-Centre Observational Study of Transplacental Transmission of Influenza Antibodies following Vaccination with AS03A-Adjuvanted H1N1 2009 Vaccine

Richard Puleston , George Bugg, Katja Hoschler, Justin Konje, James Thornton, Iain Stephenson, Puja Myles, Joanne Enstone, Glenda Augustine, Yvette Davis, Maria Zambon, Karl Nicholson, Jonathan Nguyen-Van-Tam

Abstract

Introduction

Illness and death from influenza increase during pregnancy. In the United Kingdom pregnant women were targeted in a national programme for vaccination during the H1N1 2009–10 pandemic.

Methods

In this study, pregnant women were recruited in labour from November 9, 2009 to March 10, 2010. Pandemic vaccination status was determined. Venous cord blood collected at delivery was evaluated for transplacental transfer of antibodies by measurement of haemagglutination inhibition and microneutralization titres.

Results

Samples were collected from 77 vaccinated and 27 unvaccinated women. Seroprotection (HI titre ≥1:40) was detected in 58 (75.3%, 95% CI 64.2–84.4) cord blood samples from vaccinated women and 5 (18.5%, 95% CI 6.3–38.1) from unvaccinated women (P<0.0001). There was evidence of transplacental seroprotection 8 days after maternal immunization (77.9%, 95 CI 66.2–87.1), maintained in most cases for at least 16 weeks.

Discussion

Immunization of pregnant women with AS03A-adjuvanted vaccine is followed by transplacental transfer of passive immunity at titres consistent with clinical protection in three-quarters of new-born infants. The findings support national and international pandemic H1N1 2009 recommendations for immunization during pregnancy.

 

In the body of the study, the authors caution:

Although there are no established correlates of protection for HI or MN in children and infants, evidence is accumulating that antibodies against seasonal influenza viruses, at levels that are normally associated with protection, can be found in a high proportion of cord blood samples  and neonates following immunization during pregnancy.

 

Our study found that three-quarters of vaccinated women had ‘seroprotective’ cord blood HI antibody titres of ≥1:40 that are associated with at least 50% protection against symptomatic influenza in adults.

 

Once again, this is not the first study to show a potential `protective effect’ to the fetus from maternal flu vaccination. In 2011, in saw:

 

Impact of maternal immunization on influenza hospitalizations in infants

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2011; 204 (6): S141 DOI:

Katherine A. Poehling, Peter G. Szilagyi, Mary A. Staat, Beverly M. Snively, Daniel C. Payne, Carolyn B. Bridges, Susan Y. Chu, Laney S. Light, Mila M. Prill, Lyn Finelli, Marie R. Griffin, Kathryn M. Edwards.

 

This study analyzed data collected by CDC and the New Vaccine Surveillance Network between 2002 and 2009 (before the H1N1 pandemic), and found that infants born to mothers who had received the flu vaccine during pregnancy were more than 45% less likely to be hospitalized with laboratory confirmed influenza.

 

In October of 2010, in Study: Protecting Two With One Shot I blogged on Lisa Schnirring’s CIDRAP News story regarding a study that showed that babies born to mothers who received the flu vaccination experienced fewer infections and hospitalizations during their first six months than babies whose mothers did not.

 

And two years before that, we saw a study conducted in Bangladesh (see CIDRAP’s Study: Flu shots in pregnant women benefit newborns) that offered pretty much the same conclusion.

 

While we may wish that flu shots were more effective in preventing illness (see CIDRAP: The Need For `Game Changing’ Flu Vaccines), flu shots are still considered the best preventative action you can take against influenza, and serious side effects are extremely rare.

 

And for pregnant women and their unborn child, the evidence continues to show that the real risks come from influenza virus, not from the vaccine.

Wednesday, May 02, 2012

BMJ: H1N1 Vaccination & Fetal Death Rates

image

Photo Credit – CDC

 

# 6311

 

 

One of the persistent myths on the internet is that the 2009 H1N1 vaccine was responsible for `thousands’ of miscarriages. One need only Google `Vaccine + Miscarriage’ to see some of the propaganda out there.

 

It is a sad but true statistic that in the United States about 1 million women experience a miscarriage every year. That works out to be about 2,500  miscarriages each day.

 

And if we could vaccinate all of the pregnant women in the country today, tomorrow 2500 would still miscarry.

 

And most would probably blame the vaccine.

 

There is no such thing as a 100% benign drug, and so the possibility exists that a vaccine could produce serious adverse side effects. Which is why monitoring systems like VAERS are utilized to try to detect any spike in adverse effects from vaccines.

 

Over the past 3 years we’ve seen very encouraging reports on the safety of the 2009 pandemic vaccine. Last October in Lancet: Guillain-Barré Syndrome & H1N1 Vaccine In Children) we learned:

 

Surveillance and reporting systems have not found any unusual pattern of deaths in the United States attributable to the pandemic vaccine, and the oft predicted spike in Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) never occurred (see CIDRAP VAERS study finds H1N1 vaccine safety similar to seasonal vaccines').

In fact, the VAERS report cited above found 0 deaths they could link to the pandemic Vaccine. Meanwhile, during the same period the CDC estimated that at least 12,000 (mostly younger) Americans died from the flu.

 

 

And today, in the BMJ, we’ve another study of a large cohort of pregnant women in Demark that reassuringly finds no increase in miscarriage among those who received the 2009 H1N1 vaccine.

 

 

Vaccination against pandemic A/H1N1 2009 influenza in pregnancy and risk of fetal death: cohort study in Denmark

Published 2 May 2012  BMJ 2012;344:e2794

Abstract (excerpt)

Results The cohort comprised 54 585 pregnancies; 7062 (12.9%) women were vaccinated against pandemic A/H1N1 2009 influenza during pregnancy. Overall, 1818 fetal deaths occurred (1678 spontaneous abortions and 140 stillbirths). Exposure to the H1N1 vaccine was not associated with an increased risk of fetal death (adjusted hazard ratio 0.79, 95% confidence interval 0.53 to 1.16), or the secondary outcomes of spontaneous abortion (1.11, 0.71 to 1.73) and stillbirth (0.44, 0.20 to 0.94). Estimates for fetal death were similar in pregnant women with (0.82, 0.44 to 1.53) and without comorbidities (0.77, 0.47 to 1.25).

 

Conclusion This large cohort study found no evidence of an increased risk of fetal death associated with exposure to an adjuvanted pandemic A/H1N1 2009 influenza vaccine during pregnancy.

 

 

This latest study closely matches the findings of other researchers, such as we saw in  Hong Kong: No Increase In Fetal Death Among Vaccine Recipients.

 

Ironically, while some seek to demonize the flu vaccine as causing fetal deaths, in October of last year in UK: Pregnancy And Swine Flu a study conducted at Oxford University by the National Perinatal Epidemiology unit found a strong link between infection with the 2009 `swine’ flu and an increased number of stillbirths.

 

Fetal deaths among women infected with the H1N1 virus were 5 times higher than normal.

 

Very early into the 2009 H1N1 outbreak – even before the declaration of a pandemic by the World Health Organization – it became apparent that pregnant women were making up a disproportionate number of ICU admissions for influenza, and deaths.

 

Which is a pattern we’ve seen in pandemic outbreaks in the past (see Pregnancy & Flu: A Bad Combination).

 

 

The truth is, the flu virus is a far greater danger to pregnant women and their unborn child than the vaccine.

 

While the CDC and other public health entities continue to stress the importance of seasonal flu vaccination for pregnant women, there remains reluctance among some pregnant women to get the shot.

 

Vaccines are drugs, and there is no such thing as a 100% safe and 100% effective drug. Even taking over-the-counter medicines entail some risks.

 

But the evidence continues to show that flu vaccines are among the safest drugs available, and that most years they can provide decent protection against a serious and potentially deadly illness.

 

For more reassuring research on the safety profile of modern flu vaccines, you may wish to revisit the following blogs:

 

Harvard Study Reaffirms Safety Of Flu Vaccine
MJA: Safety Of Flu Shot In Young Children
NEJM: Study On China’s H1N1 Vaccine Safety
Lancet: Immunogenicity and safety Of Adjuvanted Flu Vaccines