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Adult Immunization 2010 Influenza Segment. This material is in the public domain This information is valid as of May 25, 2010. Impact of Influenza. Approximately 36,000 influenza-associated deaths during each influenza season
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Adult Immunization 2010 Influenza Segment This material is in the public domain This information is valid as of May 25, 2010
Impact of Influenza • Approximately 36,000 influenza-associated deaths during each influenza season • Persons 65 years of age and older accounted for more than 90% of deaths • The number of deaths and cost to society from influenza is likely to increase as the nation’s population ages MMWR 2009;58 (RR-8)
Influenza Virus Strains • Type A • moderate to severe illness • affects all age groups • affects humans and other animals (particularly migratory waterfowl) • Type B • milder disease • primarily affects children • humans only
Type of nuclear material Neuraminidase Hemagglutinin A/Fujian/411/2002 (H3N2) Virus type Geographic origin Strain number Year of isolation Virus subtype Influenza Virus
Influenza A (H1N1) • A previously unknown strain of H1N1 influenza virus appeared in April 2009 • Many outbreaks in April and May • Pandemic declaration in June • Second wave of illness occurred in the fall and winter of 2009
Impact of Pandemic H1N1 Virus – United States, April 2009-March 2010 • 60 million infections • 270,000 hospitalizations • 13,000 deaths http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/estimates_2009_h1n1.htm
Influenza Vaccines • Live attenuated vaccine (LAIV) • intranasal • Approved only for persons 2 through 49 years of age who are healthy and not pregnant • Inactivated subunit (TIV) • intramuscular • split virus or purified surface antigen MMWR 2009;58(RR-8)
Fluzone HD Vaccine (sanofi pasteur) • Contains 4 times the amount of hemagglutinin than in regular Fluzone TIV • Approved by the FDA only for persons 65 years and older • ACIP has not stated a preference for Fluzone HD or other TIV brand among persons 65 years and older MMWR 2010;59 (in press)
Influenza Vaccines • Trivalent (H3N2, H1N1, B) • Efficacy varies • Duration of immunity 1 year or less for TIV • Duration of immunity at least 1 year for LAIV MMWR 2009;58(RR-8)
Inactivated Influenza Vaccine (TIV) Efficacy • 70%-90% effective among healthy persons <65 years of age • 30%-40% effective among persons 65 years and older with underlying medical conditions • Prevents complications and death from influenza among those who get the disease MMWR 2009;58(RR-8)
Influenza Vaccination Recommendation • Annual influenza vaccination is recommended for every person in the United States 6 months of age and older • Make a special effort to vaccinate persons at increased risk of complications of influenza and their close contacts • persons with underlying medical illnesses • persons 65 years of age and older • pregnant women • children younger than 2 years of age MMWR 2010;59 (in press)
Inactivated Influenza Vaccine Recommendations • Medical conditions that increase the risk of complications of influenza • Pulmonary • Cardiovascular • Metabolic • Renal dysfunction • Hemoglobinopathy • Immunosuppression • any condition that can compromise respiratory function or the handling of respiratory secretions or that can increase the risk of aspiration MMWR 2009;58(RR-8)
Pregnancy and Influenza Vaccine • Excess deaths from influenza among pregnant women were documented during the pandemics of 1918-1919 and 1957-1958 • Pregnant women were at increased risk of complications of influenza during the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic • ACIP recommends vaccination with inactivated influenza vaccine for ALL women who will be pregnant during influenza season • inactivated vaccine only • LAIV contraindicated for pregnant women MMWR 2009;58(RR-8)
Inactivated Influenza VaccineContraindications and Precautions • Severe allergic reaction to a vaccine component or following a prior dose • Moderate or severe acute illness • History of Guillain-Barre´ syndrome within 6 weeks following a previous dose of influenza vaccine MMWR 2006;55(RR-3)
Live Attenuated Influenza VaccineContraindications and Precautions • Severe allergic reaction to a vaccine component or following a prior dose • Underlying medical conditions • Immunosuppression • Pregnancy • History of Guillain-Barre´ syndrome within 6 weeks following a previous dose of influenza vaccine • Moderate or severe acute illness MMWR 2006;55(RR-3)
TIV Adverse Reactions Local reactions 15%-20% (pain, redness) Systemic reactions uncommon (fever, malaise) Severe allergic Rarereactions Neurological reactions Very rare MMWR 2006;55(RR-3)
LAIV Adverse Reactions • Increased rate of cough, coryza, nasal congestion, sore throat, chills • No increase in fever • No serious adverse reactions have been identified MMWR 2006;55(RR-3)
Administration of LAIV • Severely immunosuppressed persons should not administer LAIV • Persons who have a contraindication to receipt of LAIV may administer LAIV • Gloves and masks are not required MMWR 2006;55(RR-3)
National Center for Immunization and Respiratory DiseasesContact Information • Telephone (800) CDC-INFO • Email nipinfo@cdc.gov • Websitehttp://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/ • Broadcast Updates and Resources Web Page http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/ed/webcasts.htm