Impact of vaccination on the epidemiology of varicella
Letter to the Editor

Impact of vaccination on the epidemiology of varicella

Roger Baxter

Kaiser Permanente Vaccine Study Center, Oakland, California, USA

Correspondence to: Roger Baxter, MD. 1 Kaiser Plaza, 16B Oakland, CA 94612, USA. Email: Roger.Baxter@kp.org.

Submitted Dec 13, 2014. Accepted for publication Dec 25, 2014.

doi: 10.3978/j.issn.2224-4336.2014.12.02


Thank you for publishing reviews of our paper (Baxter R, Tran TN, Ray P, et al. Impact of vaccination on the epidemiology of varicella: 1995-2009. Pediatrics 2014;134:24-30), and for giving us a chance to respond. We agree with all the reviewers, that our study was very reassuring, in that it did not show a trend to worsening disease in older individuals, as a result of broad immunization of younger children. We appreciate the discussion of other areas of the world which are not as well immunized as our integrated medical care organization (Kaiser Permanente) (1,2), and the finding that even lower levels of immunization have been found to provide herd immunity.

Clearly this is a potent and safe vaccine that provides individual and community benefit, and downsides to the vaccine has not been clearly demonstrated, despite concerns. In areas where vaccine has not yet been implemented, if cost is a consideration, one dose is of great benefit. After the first dose, although we found evidence of circulating virus and disease, we had almost no cases of serious (greater than 300 lesions) disease. The second dose resulted in near eradication of disease in our community, and this second dose may provide added benefit to the older group, with increased herd immunity. This may be of greater importance where there is not a strong catch-up program, as we had in our older children. For us, the high rates of coverage were due as much to the California State-mandated immunization for school age children as by our medical system.

Streng and Liese note that rates of chicken pox increased from 2003 to 2006, and hypothesize possible waning of the first dose. In the case of this live vaccine, is seems more probable to us that some recipients of the vaccine had a less potent “take” from the initial immunization, allowing mild disease to manifest (3). A second dose is less of a booster than just giving some a second chance to mount a good response. We couldn’t extrapolate waning from the small number of cases in vaccinees, all of which were mild. It seems to us that one dose provides excellent protection for the individual, but the second dose is needed for potent herd immunity. These same authors are correct that very mild cases of varicella may have escaped detection, leading to an initial overestimation of effectiveness.

While we saw a decrease in herpes zoster (HZ) in our younger population following varicella implementation, we agree with Lin et al., that there remains the question of whether HZ in adults is increasing as a result of varicella immunization (4,5). Does widespread immunization of children inadvertently result in an increase in zoster in adults by decreasing immune boosting over time? There has been conflicting evidence for this (5,6). In our health plan, looking at primary hospitalization diagnosis rates for HZ, we found an age-adjusted increase from 1994 through 2006 of 2.6 to 4.6 per 100,000 members. We were not able to disentangle the results from both a large increase in elderly (and immunocompromised elderly) in the health plan, and the change to a new electronic medical records system. In addition, as others had found (7), we noted the HZ increase prior to the introduction of the varicella vaccine. More recently, we examined outpatient diagnostic codes for HZ, and found that from 2004 through 2013, there was a slight gradual increase in incidence among members 50-59 years of age, with a generally stable rate in members 60 years and older. In the older group there appeared to be a possible slight drop off starting around 2006 (internal, unpublished data). Although this was the year of licensure of Zostavax for adults, our penetration of the vaccine was quite low for the first couple of years, so we don’t see how the vaccine could account for this.

So overall, there may have been an uptick in HZ after varicella was introduced, but the pattern appeared to follow pre-vaccine trends, and by about 8 years we saw no more increase in the group at greatest risk for HZ, those over age 65. We would expect that eventually, HZ cases will decrease as unvaccinated persons die, and vaccinated individuals take their place (8). We know that HZ in vaccinated patients can and does occur, and that vaccine virus can cause HZ, but it appears to happen less frequently than with wild type virus. It should be interesting to monitor vaccinated persons over longer periods of time, to see if the risk of HZ increases greatly with age, as it does with the unvaccinated. The great increases come after age 60, so we still have a ways to go.


Acknowledgements

None.


Footnote

Conflicts of Interest: The author' research center received grant support for the study from Merck. The author has received research grants for unrelated vaccine studies from Pfizer, Sanofi Pasteur, and GSK.


References

  1. Streng A, Grote V, Carr D, et al. Varicella routine vaccination and the effects on varicella epidemiology - results from the Bavarian Varicella Surveillance Project (BaVariPro), 2006-2011. BMC Infect Dis 2013;13:303. [PubMed]
  2. Liese JG, Cohen C, Rack A, et al. The effectiveness of varicella vaccination in children in Germany: a case-control study. Pediatr Infect Dis J 2013;32:998-1004. [PubMed]
  3. Bonanni P, Gershon A, Gershon M, et al. Primary versus secondary failure after varicella vaccination: implications for interval between 2 doses. Pediatr Infect Dis J 2013;32:e305-13. [PubMed]
  4. Goldman GS, King PG. Review of the United States universal varicella vaccination program: Herpes zoster incidence rates, cost-effectiveness, and vaccine efficacy based primarily on the Antelope Valley Varicella Active Surveillance Project data. Vaccine 2013;31:1680-94. [PubMed]
  5. Yih WK, Brooks DR, Lett SM, et al. The incidence of varicella and herpes zoster in Massachusetts as measured by the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) during a period of increasing varicella vaccine coverage, 1998-2003. BMC Public Health 2005;5:68. [PubMed]
  6. Heywood AE, Wang H, Macartney KK, et al. Varicella and herpes zoster hospitalizations before and after implementation of one-dose varicella vaccination in Australia: an ecological study. Bull World Health Organ 2014;92:593-604. [PubMed]
  7. Hales CM, Harpaz R, Joesoef MR, et al. Examination of links between herpes zoster incidence and childhood varicella vaccination. Ann Intern Med 2013;159:739-45. [PubMed]
  8. Weinmann S, Chun C, Schmid DS, et al. Incidence and clinical characteristics of herpes zoster among children in the varicella vaccine era, 2005-2009. J Infect Dis 2013;208:1859-68. [PubMed]
Cite this article as: Baxter R. Impact of vaccination on the epidemiology of varicella. Transl Pediatr 2015;4(1):63-64. doi: 10.3978/j.issn.2224-4336.2014.12.02

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