Title: MMR and autism
1MMR and autism
- Dr Mary Ramsay
- HPA Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre
2MMR and autism
- Theories originate from group studying
inflammatory bowel disease at RFHMS - Link with measles infection (1993-4)
- Link with measles vaccine (1995)
- Same group then described children with bowel
disease and autism (1998) - Ten years of research on measles and IBD and five
years of research on MMR and autism - Vast majority of research rejects any link
- So, why are we still plagued by this proposal?
3Evidence on measles infection and Crohns disease
- Crohns disease (not ulcerative colitis) more
common in those born during a measles epidemic in
Sweden - Measles virus found in gut tissue of cases of
Crohns (not ulcerative colitis) - Hypothesis 1 persistent measles infection
causes Crohns disease - Not confirmed by Wakefields own study in England
- Lab techniques for detecting measles criticised
- Lab findings not confirmed in UK, USA and Japan
(including one study by Wakefield) - no evidence of supporting antibody responses in
blood
4Evidence on measles vaccine and Crohns disease
AND ulcerative colitis
- A higher rate of IBD found in a cohort of
vaccinated people compared to an unvaccinated
cohort - Hypothesis 2 measles (not MMR) vaccine causes
IBD - Groups were not comparable / asked different
questions - Findings not supported by
- large European case-control study
- UK case-control study
- UK cohort study (conducted by Wakefield - see
next hypothesis) - Incidence of Crohns is not related to use of
vaccine - in UK and in Finland
5Evidence on mumps infection andinflammatory
bowel disease
- Follow up of cohort of children born in 1970
- Association between IBD and wild mumps infection
before 2 years of age - Association between IBD and wild measles and
mumps infection in the same year - Hypothesis 3 IBD is caused by early mumps
infection (? some interaction with measles
infection) - Unexpected finding based on parental recall of
childhood illnesses at age 10 years (most mumps
is asymptomatic) - No evidence of mumps virus or high antibody
prevalence in IBD cases - No evidence of increased risk of IBD after MMR
6Evidence on MMR vaccine and autism
- Case series of 12 children with non-specific
bowel symptoms - 10 with autistic-like features
- 8 of the 12 children reported a temporal
association between onset of symptoms and MMR
immunisation - We did not prove a causal association between
MMR vaccine and the syndrome - Hypothesis 4 MMR vaccine causes novel gut
disorder which leads to autism
7Main criteria for establishing causality for a
vaccine adverse event
- Biologically plausible?
- Laboratory evidence of vaccine involvement?
- Coherence with other knowledge?
- Correlation between rates of disease and
vaccination - Increased risk after vaccination?
- Clustering in a post vaccination period
- Higher risk in vaccinated compared to
unvaccinated - Specificity of association?
- Particular syndrome in vaccine-linked cases
- Consistency across studies?
8Biological plausibility
- Virus damages the gut, leakage of proteins and
peptides accesses the brain and causes damage - Gut leakage would be in both directions no
evidence of protein losing enteropathy in
children - Liver removes peptides from blood stream
- Peptides cannot cross the blood-brain barrier
- Gershon M. Autism and the measles-mumps-rubella
(MMR) vaccine. Revisiones Vacunas 2002 2 156-7.
9Laboratory evidence of vaccine involvement
- Molecular studies detected fragments of measles
virus by PCR using novel primers - 75/91 patients with ileal lymphonodular
hyperplasia - 5/70 developmentally normal control patients
- Uhlmann V et al. J Clin Pathol Mol Pathol 2002
55 0-6 - Little information on cases and controls
including age and vaccination history. Some
cases had single measles vaccine. Controls were
mainly appendicectomies. - No information on validation of virological
methods - PCR method prone to contamination but no
information on how samples handled or stored
10Laboratory evidence of vaccine involvement
- Abstract claiming that measles RNA fragments
found were vaccine derived - Sheils O et al. Royal College of Pathologists
2002. - Based on identification of single nucleotide
polymorphism (guanidine at 7901) rather than
sequencing of whole PCR product (standard method) - This nucleotide is also present in several wild
measles strains (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nucleotide) - Wakefield forced to admit conclusions were
incorrect at US congressional hearing
11Laboratory evidence of vaccine involvement
- Legal process commenced using handful of test
cases chosen by the claimants - CSF was obtained from 6 of the lead cases, three
tested positive for measles in Irish laboratory - Controls from around 20 leukaemic patients, only
one positive - Samples tested by defendants experts - all
proved negative - Cases refused legal aid on ground of poor evidence
12Laboratory evidence of vaccine involvement
- Identification of high levels of MMR antibody
in children with autism. Immunoblotting detected
high levels of antibody to the H antigen of
measles virus. Singh et al. J Biomed Sci 2002
9 359-364. - Cases and controls not adequately described (some
controls were adults) - Immunological methods not validated and findings
are implausible - Why no response to other measles antigens (M and
N)? - Why no response to mumps and rubella antigens
despite vaccination? - Molecular weight of protein detected more
consistent with that of human albumin
13Coherence with other knowledge
- Is there a correlation between rates of disease
and vaccination in many countries? - Apparent rise in autism in UK and California
coincided with the introduction of MMR
(Wakefield, Lancet 1999 354949-950)
14Coherence with other knowledge
- Gillberg C et al. Autism 1998 2 423-4. No
increase in autism in cohorts with increasing MMR
coverage in Sweden. - Taylor et al. Lancet 1999 3532026-29. Rise in
diagnosed autism in North Thames pre-dated MMR
vaccine, continued while uptake remained
constant. - Kaye JA,et al. BMJ 2001322460-3. GP data showed
no correlation between the uptake of MMR
vaccination and the rapid increase in the risk of
autism. - Dales L et al. JAMA, 2001285 1183-5. Time
trends in autism and MMR immunisation coverage in
California and showed no correlation.
15Increased risk after vaccination
- Is there clustering in a post vaccination period?
- Parental testimonies of onset of regressive
autism in previously normal child shortly after
MMR
16Studies looking for clustering of cases after MMR
- Taylor et al. Lancet 1999 3532026-29. No
clustering of onset after MMR. No difference in
MMR vaccine uptake between cases and rest of UK
population. - DeWilde et al. Br J General Practice, 2001 51
226-227. No difference in pattern of GP
consultation for UK autistic children in 6 months
after MMR. Therefore no evidence of onset of
behavioural disturbance associated with MMR in
autistic children. - Makela A et al. Pediatrics 2002 110 957-963. No
clustering of hospitalizations for autism after
vaccination in Denmark
17North Thames studyTaylor B, Miller E, Farrington
CP et al submitted 1999
- Relative incidence of autistic regression
- within 2 months MMR 0.92 (0.38-2.21)
- within 4 months MMR 1.00 (0.52-1.95)
- within 6 months MMR 0.85 (0.45-1.60)
- within 2 months MCV 1.24 (0.61-2.56)
- within 4 months MCV 1.31 (0.73-2.33)
- within 6 months MCV 0.99 (0.56-1.75)
18Increased risk after vaccination
- Is there a higher risk in vaccinated children
compared to unvaccinated? - Geier M, Geier D. International Pediatrics 2003,
Vol 18 108-113. Compared the number of passive
reports of autism reported after MMR compared to
the number of reports of autism reported after
DTP. Estimated a high RR after MMR. - Based on passive reports to VAERs. Not designed
to test hypotheses, subject to bias from adverse
publicity. - Controls received DTP therefore different age
to those receiving MMR
19Studies looking for higher risk in vaccinated
children
- Farrington et al. Vaccine 200119(27)3632-5.
Reanalysis of North Thames data - no association
between autism and MMR at any time interval. - Madsen KM et al. NEJM 2002 347 1477-82. Risk of
autism same in unvaccinated and vaccinated
children in Danish population based study. - Peltola et al. Lancet 1998 351 1327-28. No
evidence for MMR vaccine being associated with
inflammatory bowel disease or autism (14 year
prospective study)
20Wakefields response to rejection of hypothesis
- MMR vaccine might cause autism, but that the
induction interval need not be short - Therefore no clustering of cases after receipt of
MMR - MMR causes autism but only if co-factors
present - Therefore, no correspondence necessary between
MMR uptake and autism incidence - Main evidence is now the alleged novel syndrome
of autistic entercolitis presenting with
regression - Presents at any stage after vaccination
(antibiotics, intercurrent infection, atopy,
family history of autoimmunity, etc)
21Specificity of the association
- Is there a new syndrome autistic enterocolitis
with onset of regressive symptoms after MMR? - Fombonne E. Lancet 1998 352 955. No evidence of
an association between IBD and autism. - Fombonne E. Pediatrics 2001 108 e58. No
evidence for a new variant of autism in recent
years. No change in age at parent concern or age
at regression for cases who had received MMR. - Taylor B et al. BMJ 2002 324 393-6. No evidence
of increased rate of regression or bowel symptoms
in children who developed autism after MMR.
22Percentage of Cases with Bowel Symptoms
by MMR Status
P-value 0.36
25.0
20.0
15.0
10.0
5.0
0.0
MMR Post - Parental
MMR Pre-Parental
No MMR
Concern
Concern
23Percentage of Cases with Regression
by MMR Status
P-value 0.83
35.0
30.0
25.0
20.0
15.0
10.0
5.0
0.0
No MMR
MMR Pre-Parental
MMR Post - Parental
Concern
Concern
24Main criteria for establishing causality for a
vaccine adverse event
- Biologically plausible? NO
- Laboratory evidence? NO
- Coherence with other knowledge? NO
- Increased risk after vaccination? NO
- Specificity of association? NO
- Consistency across studies? NO
25Summary of evidence on MMR and autism
- Evidence to support the hypothesis that MMR
causes autism is weak and inconsistent - Hypothesis falls down on all major criteria
- Strong evidence to reject hypothesis now
published - However
- MMR coverage has fallen
- Major demand for single vaccines
- Control of measles is under threat
26Demand for single vaccinesScientific basis
- Originates from Wakefields comments at press
conference in 1998 - Suggested giving single vaccines one year apart
- Probably based on one study showing an
association between inflammatory bowel disease
and having natural mumps and measles in the same
year (Montgomery SM. Gastroenterology 1999, 116
796-803.)
27Demand for single vaccinesDismissal of
scientific basis
- First RFH study showed an association between IBD
and SINGLE measles vaccine (Thompson NP et al.
Lancet 1995 345 1071-4.) - Another RFH study showed an association with
mumps infection below the age of two years
(Montgomery SM. Gastroenterology 1999, 116
796-803.) - Therefore giving single vaccines one year apart,
with measles vaccine first - Still exposes child to vaccine implicated in IBD
- mumps protection could be delayed by 1-5 years
- increase the risk of wild mumps at an early age
28Demand for single vaccinesPolitical basis
- Impossible to show lack of an extremely rare
association - Advise single vaccines just in case
- Current recommendations are not working
- Advise single vaccines to avoid imminent
epidemics - Parents should be given choice
- Allow single vaccines for informed parents
29Advise single vaccines just in case Dismissal
of Political basis
- This is not a case of lack of evidence
- This is strong evidence of no association
- Why should single vaccines be intrinsically
safer? - Data on population use is limited
- What if MMR prevented autism?
- MMR is the safer option
- Case control study of autism from Japan showed RR
of 5.33 for single measles vaccine (Takahashi H
et al. Jpn J Infect Dis 2003 56 114-7)
30Advise single vaccines to avoid epidemics
Dismissal of Political basis
- Would this lead to improved coverage?
- Current coverage
- at two years is 79 (fall of 13)
- at five years of age is 90 (fall of 4)
- If all those refusing MMR had single vaccines -
potential gain of between 4 and 13 - What would be the drop-out rate for all three
vaccines (given one year apart)? - similar to that for DT4 pre-school? 21
31Allow single vaccines for informed parents
Dismissal of Political basis
- Single vaccine choice is actually misinformed
- More data on safety of MMR than single vaccines
- Parents have been misled by balance of media
reporting (Report from Cardiff School of
Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies) - Allowing opt-out would provide mixed messages
- Particularly to the majority of parents who have
accepted MMR - Mixed schedules could be damaging to both
individual and population - Experience in Greece with rubella
(Panagiotopoulos T, BMJ 1999 319 1462 1467)
32Vaccination strategies to control congenital
rubella syndrome (CRS)
- Selective vaccination of girls
- allows acquisition of natural immunity in
childhood - direct protection of women of childbearing age
- Universal vaccination
- aim to eliminate rubella infection
- indirect protection of women of childbearing age
- Greece
- MMR used in private practice
- rubella used in public sector (along with measles
and mumps single vaccines) with poor control
33Effects of routine infant vaccination with
rubella vaccine
- Reduction in number of cases
- reduced risk of infection
- increasing susceptibility in older age groups
- increased age at infection
- Potential for
- increase in cases in adult women
- ? increase in cases of CRS
34Predicted incidence of CRS Selective and
universal vaccination programmes
following Anderson Grenfell, 1986
35Congenital rubella cases and rubella
notifications Greece 1991-1998 (source WHO)
36Problems with recommending single vaccines
- Giving the vaccines separately will be harmful as
children and their contacts would be exposed for
longer - No evidence to support appropriate intervals
- Drop-out rates and partial schedules will
increase - Single antigen vaccines are likely to be in short
supply - No other country using all three vaccines
- Companies unlikely to maintain license and
control - Enforced incomplete courses (cf. Td, D and T)
- Consistent advice and recommendations are needed
(cf. pertussis experience)
37UK experience with pertussis
- Concern about safety of pertussis component of
vaccine - Supported by some health professionals
- Parents given choice to opt-out
- Collapse in vaccine coverage for pertussis
- Led to major epidemics
- Knock-on effect on other vaccines
- Major factor associated with non-vaccination was
inconsistent advice from health professionals
38Whooping cough cases and vaccine coverageEngland
and Wales 1940-2002
Immunisation introduced
80
40
0
39Immunisation coverage England and Wales,
1966-2002
Vaccination coverage
40Conclusion
- MMR and autism hypothesis has been firmly
rejected - Evidence is in favour of continuing MMR without
single vaccine option - Health professionals need to be consistent
- Our challenge is to redress the media balance