H1N1
"Swine Flu" Pandemic in the U.S. May Peak before Adequate Supplies of
Vaccine Become Available
 A
new vaccine for the novel H1N1 influenza A ("swine flu")
may not become available in the U.S. in time to protect the population against
the peak of this season's flu epidemic, according to epidemiologists who are closely
monitoring the spread of the flu outbreak. |
|
"Although
the new vaccine now in development is expected to work better than originally
projected, it will still arrive too late to affect the full fury of the swine
flu," said epidemiologists interviewed by the New York Times. The
experts predicted that the peak of the outbreak likely will come in October or
November, and there will not be enough vaccine to protect the 159 million Americans
who have been designated by health officials as the
first to receive the vaccine. These are healthcare and emergency workers,
pregnant women, people aged 6 months through 24 years, adults up to age 64 with
certain pre-existing medical problems, and people caring for infants younger than
6 months old.
Risk of Swine Flu among People with HIV/AIDS
 | |
There
is little evidence to show that people infected with HIV are more at risk of getting
H1N1 flu, said Dr. Susan Fernyak, director of communicable disease control and
prevention at the San Francisco Department of Public Health. However, she emphasized
that HIV positive individuals "should be advised to get the swine flu vaccination
as soon as it becomes available to them." Health officials have also advised
HIV positive persons to seek vaccination for the regular seasonal flu. According
to interim guidelines issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) and last updated in June, there is insufficient data available to know who
is at most risk for contracting swine flu. HIV positive people --particularly
those with low CD4 cell counts or AIDS -- can experience more severe complications
from typical seasonal influenza, and it is possible that HIV positive adults and
adolescents may also be at higher risk for H1N1 flu complications. So far, however,
surveillance
data have not shown that HIV infection is a risk factors for H1N1-related complications
or death.
Only 1 Dose of H1N1 Vaccine May Be Necessary
Federal
officials reported last week that a single dose of the new vaccine, rather
than the 2 they had expected, likely will prove fully protective against H1N1
flu. This means that by November, there will be adequate supplies of the vaccine
for those persons identified as first priority recipients.
Officials expect
about 50 million doses of swine flu vaccine to reach government warehouses by
October 15, and 20 million more doses to be ready each week thereafter until 195
million is reached.
Unfortunately, if the H1N1 flu epidemic peaks in late
October, as some health officials expect, millions of people likely will be infected
before the vaccine is available. "It would be bizarre for it to peak in January
or February, the way seasonal flu does," said Dr. Marc Lipsitch, an epidemiologist
at the Harvard School of Public Health and a consultant on flu epidemics to the
President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology.
Dr. Lipsitch
said that the flu pandemics in 1918 and 1957 both peaked early. It is normal for
the number of influenza cases to be "near zero" at this time of the
year (mid-September), yet the CDC has already rated flu activity as "widespread"
in 11 states, primarily in the southeast, but also in Arizona, Alaska, and Oklahoma.
"Ninety-eight percent of those flu cases were the new H1N1 swine flu,"
said Dr. Anne Schuchat, chief of immunization and respiratory diseases at the
CDC.
After the new vaccine is tested, supplies will be shipped to health
centers, schools, and other vaccination sites. Recent vaccine studies suggest
that most recipients will be protected after 8-10 days. Therefore, if the epidemic's
peak comes in late October, millions of people are likely to become infected with
the flu before the vaccine is widely available.
However, if a single shot
turns out to be protective, and if the flu peaks in late December, things may
turn out better. Federal officials said there was no way to tell whether the pessimistic
or optimistic projections would be right, since flu peaks at different times in
different regions each year.
"I can't tell you it's going to be too
late for 'a lot' of people," said NIAID director Dr. Anthony Fauci, who is
overseeing vaccine trials for the National Institutes of Health (NIH). "It's
certainly going to be too late for some."
Swine Flu Effects Expected
to Be Mild
Regardless of the timing of the peak of the pandemic in
the U.S., most cases of the swine flu are expected to be mild. Although a few
strains of the new H1N1 virus have been shown to be resistant to the antiviral
drug oseltamivir (Tamiflu), they have not yet become widespread.
Dr. Fauci
said last Friday that the trials he was overseeing confirm that a single vaccine
dose usually conferred immunity in adults. In the elderly, only 50%-60% develop
adequate immune response, he said, but that is "right in the ballpark"
for seasonal flu shots in the elderly, since their immune responses are weaker
than those of younger adults.
9/15/09
Sources D
McNeil, Jr. Vaccine Supply May Miss Swine Flu Peak. New York Times. September
12, 2009. MS
Bajko. HIV-positives advised to get swine flu vaccine. Bay Area Reporter.
September 10, 2009. |