Islamabad, Jan 11 : When vaccinating children against varicella (chicken pox),
researchers at Yale School of Medicine have found, two doses are better than
one. In fact, the odds of developing chicken pox were 95 percent lower in
children who had received two doses of the vaccine compared with those who had
received only one dose.
Published in the Journal of Infectious Diseases,
the study was led by Eugene D. Shapiro, M.D., professor in the Department of
Pediatrics at Yale and his colleagues at Yale and Columbia
universities.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) began
recommending a single dose of chicken pox vaccine for children ages 1 to 13 in
1995. The chicken pox rate fell drastically and studies showed that the
effectiveness of one dose was 86 percent. But there was still a high rate of
breakthrough illness in immunized children. The CDC changed the immunization
policy for chicken pox in 2006, adding a second dose for children ages 4 to 6.
In this study, Shapiro and his team showed that the effectiveness of two doses
is 98.3 percent.
Past studies have suggested that two doses of varicella
vaccine are linked to higher antibody levels than one dose, but this is the
first study to assess the clinical effectiveness of two doses of the vaccine in
the general population. In a survey of Connecticut children, Shapiro and his
team discovered 71 cases of chicken pox in children ages 4 and older. None of
these children had received two doses of vaccine; 66 (93 percent) had received
one dose and five (7 percent) had received no vaccine.
"We weren't
surprised to find that two doses of varicella vaccine are highly effective and
are more likely to prevent varicella than a singe dose," said Shapiro. "The
findings confirm that, at least in the short term, the policy of routinely
administering two rather than one dose of varicella vaccine is sensible. Other
countries that are routinely immunizing children with varicella vaccine may
consider changing to a two-dose regimen."
Because it has only been four
years since the CDC policy change, Shapiro also recommends that there be
continued monitoring of the effectiveness of two doses to assure that its high
degree of effectiveness is sustained.
Other authors on the study include
Marietta Vazquez, M.D., Daina Esposito, Nancy Holabird, and James
Dziura.
Ends
SA/EN
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Double doses of chicken pox vaccine most effective
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