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Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention Baylor College of Medicine Med-Peds Continuity Clinic Anoop Agrawal, M.D.
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Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Jan 11, 2016

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Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention. Baylor College of Medicine Med-Peds Continuity Clinic Anoop Agrawal, M.D. The Cause: N. Meningitidis. Neisseria meningitidis is a commensal bacteria of the human nasopharynx, its only reservoir. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Meningococcemia:Epidemiology &

PreventionBaylor College of MedicineMed-Peds Continuity Clinic

Anoop Agrawal, M.D.

Page 2: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

The Cause: N. MeningitidisNeisseria meningitidis is a commensal bacteria of the human nasopharynx, its only reservoir.

Gram negative, aerobic, diplococcus with a polysaccharide capsule

5% to 15% of adolescents and young adults are asymptomatic carriers vs. <2% in young children.

Page 3: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Epidemiology of Disease

Rate of disease in US: 1.5 cases per 100,000

Incidence peaks in late winter and early spring

Highest risk groups: infants less than 1 year of age and adolescents

Most carriers develop protective antibodies to the organism.

Page 4: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention
Page 5: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Annual incidence of meningococcal disease, US., 1999-2008

MMWR, Jan 2011/60(03);72-76

Page 6: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Epidemiology ContinuedThirteen serogroups exist, but five serogroups account for majority of invasive disease: A, B, C, Y, W-135

The subtype causing disease varies over time and by geographic location.

Subtype A was a common cause in US till WW II. Now is the major cause in sub-Saharan Africa (aka the”meningitis belt”).

Currently, B, C and Y are major causes in US.

Page 7: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention
Page 8: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Epidemiology Continued

In 2001, 65% of cases in infants age 1 year or younger were caused by subtype B.

Presently, none of the meningitis vaccines offer protection for subtype B.

Page 9: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention
Page 10: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

PathogenesisTransmission occurs by droplet aerosolization or direct contact with secretions.

The bacteria must then cross mucosal barrier and gain access to the bloodstream - virulence factors and host defense mechanisms will determine the development of disease

Crowded living conditions, exposure to tobacco smoke are known risk factors.

Page 11: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Disease OutcomesMajority of cases manifested as meningitis (49%), followed by bacteremia (33%) and pneumonia (9%).

Case fatality rate of 10% to 14%

Up to 20% will have serious sequale: neurologic deficits, deafness, or limb loss.

Page 12: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Primary PreventionMeningococcal Vaccines - What are the two types available?

MPSV4 (polysaccharide)

MCV4 (conjugate)

•Menactra (sanofi pasteur) - 2005

•Menveo (Novartis) - 2010

Page 13: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

The VaccinesMCV4MCV4 MPSV4MPSV4

Licensed 2005/2010 1978

Ages approved 2-55 years 2 or greater

Serotypes A, C, Y, W-135 A, C, Y, W-135

Route IM SQ

Duration of protectionUnknown, longer than

MPSV3-5 years

Herd Immunity Yes No

Page 14: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

MortalityWhich disease has the highest mortality?

a. meningitis

b. bacteremia

c. pneumonia

Which age group has the higher mortality?

a. infants

b. adolescents

Page 15: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Other advantages

Conjugate vaccines can be boosted at a later date.

MCV-4 can eliminate carrier state.

MPSV-4 vaccine has decreased immune responsiveness to subsequent vaccinations.

Page 16: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

MCV4 (conjugate)

What are the recommendations for use of this vaccine for adolescents? What other persons are considered high risk and should also be vaccinated?

Page 17: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

MCV4 Vaccination Rec’s

Adolescents:

Should be administered as part of routine preventive visit at 11-12 years of age

•Booster dose at age 16 years

Any adolescent requesting to reduce their risk by vaccination.

Page 18: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

MCV4 Vaccination Rec’s

Other groups that need vaccination:

College freshman living in dormitories

Microbiology lab personnel

Military recruits

Travelers headed to areas of high endemic disease

Persons with anatomic or functional asplenia, or terminal complement deficiencies

Page 19: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Why is a booster dose now needed?

MCV-4 was expected to provide protection for persons age16 through 21 years with single administration at age 11 or 12 years.

Recent data indicate many adolescents might not be protected for more than 5 years.

Page 20: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Case 1An 16 year old girl presents to your office requesting the MCV4 vaccine. She just found out she is pregnant. Can she receive the vaccine?

YES.

Does she need a booster following today’s vaccination?

No. Persons who receive first dose at or after age 16 years do not need a booster.

Page 21: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Case 2An 5 year old girl with a history sickle cell and asplenia since the age of 20 months presents for a well child exam. She received the her initial MCV-4 vaccination with a booster 8 weeks later at the age of 2 years. Does she need any further boosters for MCV-4?

YES. Children whose previous booster was before their 7th birthday need boosters every 3 years. After the 7 years of age, vaccinations should be given every 5 years.

Page 22: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Case 3

An 17 year old girl with h/o HIV presents to your office for her annual physical. She has never received MCV-4. What is the vaccination schedule for her situation?

For children and teens ages 11-18 years with HIV, give 2 doses at least 8 weeks apart.

Page 23: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Case 4

An 60 year old physician is planning a vacation to northern Nigeria in January. Does this person need vaccination for meningococcal disease? If so, what will you administer?

Yes, vaccination is needed. MPSV-4 is the only option for adults older than 55 years of age.

Page 24: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

Case 5

An 16 year old girl presents to your office for routine physical. According to her vaccination record, she received MCV-4 at age 13. When can she receive her booster dose?

Now. If primary dose was given at age 13-15 years, then booster can be given between age 16-18 years.

Reasoning: adolescents aged 14 and up are less likely to visit the doctor

Page 25: Meningococcemia: Epidemiology & Prevention

SummaryN. Meningitidis is found in 5-15% of asymptomatic adolescents.

The new MCV4 is recommended for all adolescents beginning at age 11 with a booster at age 16 years.

MCV-4 has now been approved to age

It protects against 2 of the 3 most common serotypes in US - C and Y, but does not protect against B.

MPSV4 may be used if MCV4 is unavailable.