Title: Measles and measles vaccine
1Epidemiology of Mumps and Multistate Mumps
Outbreak United States 2006
2Outline
- Clinical Characteristics
- Epidemiology of mumps
- Multistate Outbreak, 2006
- Vaccine recommendations
- Challenges
3Mumps
- Acute viral illness
- Parotitis and orchitis described by Hippocrates
in 5th century B.C. - Viral etiology described by Johnson and
Goodpasture in 1934 - Frequent cause of outbreaks among military
personnel in prevaccine era
4Mumps Virus
- Paramyxovirus
- RNA virus
- One antigenic type
- Rapidly inactivated by chemical agents, heat and
ultraviolet light
5Mumps Clinical Features
- Incubation period 14 - 18 days
- Nonspecific prodrome of low-grade fever,
headache, malaise, myalgias - Parotitis in 30 - 40
- Up to 20 of infections asymptomatic
- May present as lower respiratory illness,
particularly in preschool-aged children
6(No Transcript)
7Mumps Complications
8Mumps Epidemiology
- Reservoir Human
- Transmission Respiratory drop nuclei
- Subclinical infections may transmit
- Temporal pattern Peak in late winter and spring
- Communicability Three days before to four
- days after onset of active
- disease
-
9- Mumps United States, 1968- 2005
2005 provisional data
10- Mumps United States, 1980- 2005
2-dose schedule
2005 provisional data
11U.S. Mumps Cases
- 2005 265 cases
- 2004 258 cases
- 2002 270 cases
- 1996 751 cases
- 1993 1,692 cases
- 2010 Health Objective is to eliminate indigenous
mumps by 2010
12Mumps Outbreak NY State, 2005
MMWR Feb 24, 2006
13- Mumps Outbreak United States 2006
Total reported cases 4,602
4
193
1
650
1,921
85
349
501
3
134
782
1
2
In PA, 14 of the 85 cases are considered
outbreak-associated.
- Provisional Number of Cases by State as of June
20, 2006
14Week of Onset for Mumps Cases in the Eight the
Outbreak States, NNDSS (Provisional), 1 January
20 June, 2006 (n3860)
15Incidence of Mumps by Week of Onset, NNDSS
(Provisional), 1 January 20 June 2006
(n3860)1,2,3
Nebraska
Iowa
Pennsylvania
Missouri
Illinois
South Dakota
Kansas
Wisconsin
1 Per 100,000 2 Incidence scale differs by
state 3Through NNDSS week 24
16Demographic Summary of Reported Mumps Cases,
NNDSS (Provisional), January 1-June 20, 2006
(n3860)
1940 (50) 1920 (50) 2525 (65) Median 22
years Rangelt1-96
Reported from -- Iowa -- Other 7 OB
states Female Age
17Incidence of Mumps/100,000, 8 Outbreak-Associated
States, NNDSS (Provisional), 1 January 20 June
2006
- Iowa 65.3
- Kansas 28.0
- South Dakota 24.1
- Nebraska 17.1
- Wisconsin 4.9
- Missouri 3.1
- Illinois 1.1
- Pennsylvania 0.7
States with delayed reporting through NNDSS,
rates likely to increase
18Incidence of Mumps by Age Group in the Eight
Outbreak States, NNDSS (Provisional), 1 January
20 June 2006 (n3860)
19Provisional Incidence of Mumps Cases by Age
Group, NNDSS 1 January 20 June 2006 (n3860)
Iowa
Other seven states IL, KS, MO, NE, PA, SD, WI
20Multistate Mumps Outbreak 2006
- College students especially in Iowa
- Cases in health care workers
- Few outbreaks reported in schools or child care
centers - Transmission remained fairly focal
- Little or no spread to vaccine refuser
populations and very few cases in infants - Vaccination status cases poorly reported through
NNDSS to date - (Iowa June 17th 2006)
- 7 unvaccinated
- 14 1 dose
- 50 2 doses
- 30 unknown vaccination status (majority adults)
21Multistate Mumps Outbreak 2006
- Mumps G genotype (20 specimens from 9 states) -
source unknown
22Clinical Summary of Reported Mumps Cases, NNDSS
(Provisional), January 1-June 20, 2006 (n3860)
Number () 2215 (80.8) 10 (0.4) 5 (0.2) 59
(4.4) 6 (0.2) 43 (1.6) 0
Clinical Feature (n)1 Parotitis (2741) Meningitis
(2542) Encephalitis (2530) Orchitis
(1333)2 Deafness (2536) Hospitalization
(2745) Death (2745)
1 Number with Yes or No in data field
included. Cases with Unknown or missing data
excluded. 2 Data collected among males only.
23Hospitalizations
- Two data sources for hospitalization (1 January
20 June 2006) - NNDSS 43 hospitalizations
- Biweekly Report 66 hospitalizations
- Data source for reason for hospitalization
Biweekly Report only - 11 of 66 hospitalizations likely NOT to be
mumps-related - Hospitalized for another reason (e.g., colitis,
pneumonia) and found to have mumps - Reason for hospitalization (n55)1
1 Not mutually exclusive (ie., may have gt1 reason)
24Epidemiological and Laboratory InvestigationsPrel
iminary Data
- Attack rates in 2 highly affected college
campuses Iowa - 2.0 (97 college students 2 vaccine doses)
- 3.8 (77 college students 2 vaccine doses)
- Vaccine failure rate (college room mate contact
study Iowa) - 2 dose recipients 8
25Mumps Vaccine
- Composition Live virus (Jeryl Lynn strain)
- Efficacy 95 (Range, 90 - 97)
- Duration ofImmunity Lifelong
- Schedule 2 Doses (as MMR)
- Should be administered with measles and rubella
(MMR)
26Mumps Vaccine EfficacyClinical Trials
Study Population Vaccine Strain Year Vaccine Efficacy 95 CI
Philadelphia Jeryl Lynn 1965-67 95 88-98
North Carolina Jeryl Lynn 1966-67 96 88-99
27Mumps Vaccine EffectivenessOutbreak Studies
Study Population Vaccine Strain Year Vaccine Effectiveness 95 CI
New York Jeryl Lynn 1973 79 53-91
Canada Jeryl Lynn 1977 75 49-87
Ohio Jeryl Lynn 1981 81 88-98
Ohio Jeryl Lynn 1982 85 39-94
New Jersey Jeryl Lynn 1983 91 77-93
Tennessee Jeryl Lynn 1986 78 64-87
Kansas Jeryl Lynn 1988-89 83 57-94
28Mumps Vaccine (MMR) Indications
- All infants gt12 months of age
- Susceptible adolescents and adults without
documented evidence of immunity
29Measles-Mumps-Rubella Vaccine
- 12 months is the recommended and minimum age
- MMR given before 12 months should not be counted
as a valid dose - Revaccinate at gt12 months of age
30Mumps Immunity
- Born before 1957
- Documentation of physician-diagnosed mumps
- Serologic evidence of mumps immunity
- Documentation of adequate vaccination
31Second Dose Recommendations
- First dose of MMR at 12-15 months
- Second dose of MMR at 4-6 years
- Second dose may be given any time gt4 weeks after
the first dose
32Second Dose of MMR Vaccine
- Intended to produce immunity in persons who
failed to respond to the first dose (primary
vaccine failure) - May boost antibody titers in some persons
33Updated ACIP Recommendations
- Changes in evidence of immunity through
vaccination - 1 dose children 1-4 years and low risk adults
- 2 doses school aged children, students in post
high school educational facilities, international
travelers and workers in health care facilities - Health facility workers without other evidence of
immunity - 2 doses routinely
- Birth before 1957 consider one dose in non
outbreak setting and strongly consider 2 doses
during outbreak - Outbreak control recommendations
- 2nd dose for children 1-4 years and low risk
adults if affected by outbreak
34Why mumps, why mid west US and why now?
- Unrecognized importation(s) (student visitors
from UK or elsewhere?) - Delayed recognition outbreak
- Physicians not familiar with clinical illness
- Vaccine modified disease?
- Some early cases ruled out with negative IgM
- College settings
- High transmission potential
- Lower 2 dose vaccine coverage than schools
- Poor adherence to isolation guidelines?
35Why mumps, why mid west US and why now?
- 2 doses and 90 vaccine effectiveness may
result in accumulation of susceptible persons
sufficient to sustain transmission and a sizeable
outbreak on a periodic basis - Contribution of waning immunity?
- Transmission from mumps infections and mild
illness presentations (vaccine modified disease)?
36However
- High MMR vaccine coverage levels and vaccine
effectiveness likely prevented thousands of
additional mumps cases (9 out of 10 exposures
that may have resulted in infection in 2 dose
vaccinees prevented) - Incidence relatively low
- Disease may be modified
- Complications and hospitalizations?