Meningococcal Vaccine
MenB ADR
Local reactions Fatigue, headache, muscle or joint pain, fever or chills Nausea and diarrhea
Meningococcal outbreaks
less than 2% of reported cases Most recent outbreaks caused by serogroup C and B
Neisseria meningitidis incidence
*Peaks in 3 age groups:* Infants children 5 years or younger Young adults 16-21 years Adults 65 years or older Incidence decreases since peak in late 1990s 800-1200 case/year in the US Epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa
MenACWY Recommendations for Persistent complement component deficiences (PCCD) or asplenic patients
2 dose series 8 weeks apart May also require MenB Booster every 5 years
Outbreak Definition
3 more more confirmed or probable primary cases Period of less than 3 months Primary attack rate: >10 cases/100,000 population
MenACWY Recommendations
Administer 11-12 years - booster at 16 years old Catch up - 13-15 years if not previously with booster 16-18 years Over 16 - one dose, no booster Not recommended after 21 years old unless at increased risk
Neisseria Meningitidis Serogroups
At least 13 serogroups based on characteristics of polysaccharide capsule Most invasive disease caused by serogroups A, B, C, Y, W Relative importance of serogroups - depends on geographic location and other factors (age)
MenB dosing
Bexsero: 2 doses *1 month apart* Trumenba: 3 doses *0, 1-2 and 6 months* Not interchangeable Both IM
Meningococcemia
Bloodstream infection May occur with or without meningitis Clinical findings: fever, petechial/purpuric rash, hypotension/shock, acute adrenal hemorrhage, multi-organ failure
Clinical features of Meningococcal disease
Colonizes nasopharynx - transmitted by direct contact with large-droplet respiratory secretions from patients or asymptomatic carriers Antecedent URI may be contributing factor Incubation period 3-4 days (range 2-10 days) Abrupt onset of fever, meningeal symptoms, hypotension, and rash Fatality rate 10-15% (40% or less in meningococcemia)
Neisseria meningitidis disease course
Develops rapidly and has high morbidity and mortality Case-fatality ratio of 10-15% 11-19% of survivors have long-term sequelae (neurologic disability, limb or digit loss, hearing loss)
Vaccine differention
Differences based on serogroup coverage, type of vaccine, approved ages, and route of administration
Treatment
Empiric antibiotic therapy with 3rd gen cephalosporin/ vancomycin after appropraite cultures are obtained
MenACWY - high risk reccomendations
First year college students (21 years or younger) who have not received MenACWY at 16 or older Microbiologists routinely exposed to isolates Military recruits Travellers to hyperendemic or epidemic areas, particularly the meningitis belt Booster every 5 years as long as person remains at risk
Chemoprophylaxis
For close contacts of infected person during 7 days before symptom onset Start within 24 hours of onset of disease in contact, not useful after 14 days
Risk Factors: Enivronmental
Household exposure to carrier or sick individual House crowding Antecedent viral infection Active and passive smoking
Meningococcal Serogroup B - Recommendation
Insufficient evidence to recommend vaccinating all adolescents ACIP - encourages individual clinical decision making
ADR
Local reactions for 1-2 days, fever >100 F, systemic reactions (HA, malaise, fatigue)
Outbreak Recommendations
MenACWY - control of outbreaks caused by vaccine-preventable serogroups MenB - only for outbreak of serogroup B
MenACWY Recommendations for HIV-infected patients
MenACWY-D routine immunization for all patients at 2 months or older Adults with no history of vaccination: 2 doses 8 weeks apart, booster every 5 years Patients who have received a dose at 7 years or older: booster every 5 years
Infections caused by Neisseria meningitidis
Meningitis, sepsis, focal infections (pneumonia and arthritis)
Precautions
Moderate or severe acute illness - delay immunization until recovered
Meningococcal meningitis
Most common pathologic presentation Result of Hematogenous dissemination Clinical findings: fever, headache, stiff neck
MenB indications
Patients with complement component deficiency or taking Soliris Patients with asplenia Microbiologists routinely exposed to Neisseria meningitidis People identified to be at increased risk because of serogroup B outbreak Individual clinical decision making - age 16-23 years for short term protection (2 dose series)
Vaccines available
Quadrivalent Meningococcal Conjugate Vaccine (MenACWY), Menactra, Menveo, Menhibrix (MCV4) Serogroup B (MenB), Bexsero and Trumenba
Neisseria meningitidis
Severe acute gram negative bacterial infection
Contraindications
Severe allergic reactions to vaccine component or following prior dose of vaccien
Meningococcal Serogroup B - Incidence
Stable and low in adolescents and young adults ~ 50-60 cases and 5-10 deaths reported/year College students: similar to/lower than incidence in non-college of same age
Risk Factors: Host
Terminal complement pathway deficiency Asplenia Genetic risk factors