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3/1/2017 Updates from February 2017 ACIP Meeting Wednesday, March 1, 2017 12:00 PM ET In Case of Technical Difficulties • If you hear an echo: – Make sure you are only logged in once on your computer – Select one form of audio only (either computer speakers or telephone connection) • If the audio is choppy: – Press pause in the top left corner of your screen – Wait 10 seconds and then click play • Dial 800-843-9166 at any time for live assistance 1 3/1/2017 Agenda Agenda Welcome and Introductions William Schaffner, MD, NFID Medical Director and Professor of Preventive Medicine and Infectious Diseases, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) Overview Patricia (Patsy) A. Stinchfield, MS, RN, CPNP, CIC, Senior Director of Infection Prevention & Control, Children’s Minnesota and NFID Secretary Updates from February 2017 ACIP Meeting William Schaffner, MD, NFID Medical Director and Professor of Preventive Medicine and Infectious Diseases, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine Questions and Answers This webinar is supported by an unrestricted educational grant from Merck & Co., Inc. NFID policies restrict funders from controlling program content. General Information • Please note that today’s webinar is being recorded • All phone lines will be placed on mute throughout the program • To hear audio: – Computer: Follow directions – Phone: 303-248-0285; Access Code 6560003 • After the presentations, there will be a Question and Answer period – Use the Chat box on the lower left side of your screen to type your question • At the end of the webinar, participants will be directed to an online evaluation 2 3/1/2017 CME/CNE Credit & Webinar Evaluation The National Foundation for Infectious Diseases (NFID) is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education (CME) for physicians. NFID designates this enduring material for a maximum of 1.0 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditTM This continuing nursing education activity was approved by the Ohio Nurses Association, an accredited approver by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation (OBN-001-91). This education activity has been approved for a maximum of 1.o contact hour. To receive contact hours, you must complete the online evaluation and pass the post-test with a score of 80% or higher Online evaluation and post-test will be available following the webinar at: bit.ly/ACIP-0301-Webinar Certificate will be available for print or download following successful completion of online evaluation and post-test until March 1, 2018. CPE Credit & Webinar Evaluation The National Association of Chain Drug Stores (NACDS) is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education to provide continuing pharmacy education (CPE) for pharmacists. NACDS designates this enduring material for a maximum of 1.0 contact hour of CPE credit. To receive contact hour, you must complete the online evaluation and pass the post-test with a score of 80% or higher Online evaluation and post-test will be available following the webinar at: http://nacds.learnercommunity.com/webinars/aciprecommendations-2017 3 3/1/2017 Disclosures Marla Dalton (NFID staff, content reviewer) owns stock, stock options, or bonds from Merck & Co., Inc. William Schaffner (NFID medical director, presenter) served as an advisor or consultant for Dynavax, Merck & Co., Inc., Novavax, Inc., Pfizer Inc., and Sanofi Pasteur; and served as a speaker for Genentech. All other activity planners/reviewers and staff for this activity have no relevant financial relationships to disclose Learning Objectives At the conclusion of this webinar, participants will be able to: Describe most recent ACIP recommendations for adult and childhood/adolescent immunization Explain how recent changes to vaccine recommendations will impact vaccination programs Discuss information on new and/or future vaccines for potential use in practice 4 3/1/2017 About NFID Non-profit 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to educating the public and healthcare professionals about causes, treatment, and prevention of infectious diseases across the lifespan Reaches consumers, health professionals, and media through: Coalition-building activities Public and professional educational program Scientific meetings, research, and training Longstanding partnerships to facilitate rapid program initiation and increase programming impact Flexible and nimble organization Updates from February 2017 ACIP Meeting Wednesday, October 5, 2016 12:00 PM ET Patricia (Patsy) A. Stinchfield, MS, RN, CPNP, CIC NFID Secretary Senior Director of Infection Prevention & Control Children’s Minnesota 5 3/1/2017 Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) 15 members 3 meetings/year 36 liaison representatives from professional/academic societies 8 ex-officio members from federal agencies Media may be present Public comment at each meeting Meeting agenda, transcripts, slides available at: www.cdc.gov/vaccines/acip February 22-23, 2017 ACIP Agenda One Vote: Hepatitis B vaccine in infants born to hepatitis Binfected mothers, updated recommendations and Vaccines for Children (VFC) vote 6 3/1/2017 February 22-23, 2017 ACIP Agenda DISCUSSION ONLY TOPICS: Influenza Adult Immunization Herpes Zoster Vaccines Meningococcal Vaccines Global Immunization Update Polio eradication Dengue, Zika, Yellow Fever Vaccination Errors Mumps Disease and Vaccine Hepatitis B Vaccine: Revaccination for Infants Born to HBV-Infected Moms (HBsAg+) Current guidance: After birth, HBIG and 3 dose hepatitis B vaccine series Lab test 1-2 months after vaccine series is done Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)—should be negative Hepatitis B antibody (Anti-HBs)—protection Positive and protected if >10mlU/ml Negative and not protected if <10mlU/ml—need revaccination. Previous practice has been to repeat 3 doses, but workgroup question was is 1 dose sufficient? 7 3/1/2017 Hepatitis B Revaccination Strategies Noele Nelson, MD, PhD, MPH Hepatitis B Antibody Response to Single Dose Revaccination vs. 3 Dose Revaccination Initial non-responder follow up study with 2 groups: Group A with HBIG and 3 additional doses 96% seroconverted at 12 months, 100% after a 4th dose Group B with 3 additional doses of vaccine, (no HBIG) 95.2% seroconversion at 12 months and 95.2% at 13 months after 4th dose 94.8% AB+ of initial non-responders who complete a second 3 dose series 14/15 (93.3%) had anti-HBs > 10mlU/ml after single dose revaccination (N=15) 1Assateerawatt et al, Asian Pacific journal of allergy and immunology; 1991; 11(1)85-91 2Ko et al. Vaccine 2014: 32(18) 2127-33 3Perinatal Hep B Prevention Program 2012-2016 Georgia, Michigan, New York City 8 3/1/2017 VOTE: Hepatitis B Revaccination for Infants Born to HBV+ Mothers Language will allow lab testing after initial 3 dose series and if seropositive, no further vaccination If seronegative, may do one additional dose and retest after 1-2 months Language remains that allows for choosing to just repeat the 3 dose series without lab testing after the first dose followed by lab testing after the 6th dose If Anti-HBs is > 10 is protected, no further vaccination or testing If Anti-HBs is < 10 is a non-responder, no further vaccination or testing Influenza Current Season Surveillance Most circulating strains are A strains and predominantly H3N2; influenza B may just be starting Contents of injectable vaccine are a good match for the low levels of virus circulating in US Moderate season so far; vaccine efficacy is 48% We have not peaked with influenza yet except possibly in the Northwest 29 pediatric deaths to date Vaccine virus selection for 2017-2018 will be made in early March by WHO 9 3/1/2017 Influenza Vaccine Updates Afluria® by Seqirus evaluation of 2010 increase in adverse events of fever and febrile seizures in children <5 years in Southern Hemisphere CSL TIV Excellent presentation of safety review and analysis of all systems Root cause was TIV stimulated release of cytokines and chemokines more robustly than previously; manufacturing process may have not fully split the B virus adequately yielding a greater immune response Problem studied, resolved, similar fever rates in TIV and QIV and the vaccine will be offered in US during 2017-2018 season Fluzone® Sanofi Pasteur HD vs. SD showed HD in nursing home residents reduces lab confirmed flu, is cost effective at 81 residents at $30/vaccine ($2,430) or less than the average cost of hospitalization LAIV Influenza Vaccine Updates FluMist® by MedImmune presented review of 2015-2016 vaccine effectiveness data of LAIV against influenza hospitalization in 6 studies; CDC VE network showed no effectiveness compared to consolidated other sites in England, Finland, Canada, etc. at 54.5% Two potential hypotheses: Reduced replication of H1N1 component in human cells Vaccine virus interference by quadrivalent formulation Will be using A/Slovenia H1N1 for 2017-2018 vaccine studying in cells and ferrets Committee had multiple questions before considering using LAIV: More human studies, bigger power, would like to fully understand original US vaccine failure better, non-manufacturer studies to consider LAIV not recommended in the coming season 10 3/1/2017 Updates from February 2017 ACIP Meeting Wednesday, October 5, 2016 12:00 PM ET William Schaffner, MD NFID Medical Director Professor of Preventive Medicine and Infectious Diseases Vanderbilt University School of Medicine Herpes Zoster Vaccines Zostavax® (Merck); live, attenuated vaccine, 1 dose 2008 - ACIP recommended for immunocompetent ≥ 60 years Efficacy: 51% vs zoster; 67% vs PHN Reduced in older recipients Duration of protection vs zoster Year 4 45% Year 9 7% 31% adults ≥ 60 years in US have been vaccinated 11 3/1/2017 Anticipated Herpes Zoster Vaccine (Unlicensed) (GSK) subunit vaccine (zoster/su), 2 doses Surface glycoprotein E + ASO1B adjuvant Efficacy: 97% vs zoster in persons ≥ 50 years 91% vs zoster in persons ≥ 70 years Duration of protection vs zoster Year 4- 85% in persons ≥ 70 years More local reactions than with Zostavax® Herpes Zoster Work Group Deliberations Gaps: HZ/su Protection beyond 4 years? Efficacy in immunocompromised patients? Considerations: Recommend HZ/su routine age 50 vs. 60 years? Recommended for Previous Zostavax® recipients? 12 3/1/2017 Adult Immunization Standards for Adult Immunization Practice (2014) ACCESS vaccination status at every encounter Strongly RECOMMEND needed vaccines ADMINISTER vaccines or REFER to a vaccine provider DOCUMENT vaccines received in a state registry Adult Immunization Online survey of adults and healthcare professionals (2016) Adult patients reported low levels of care that reflected the Standards Vaccination assessment 9%-53% Providers reported high levels of Standards implementation Vaccination assessment 67%-97% 13 3/1/2017 Meningococcal Vaccines Sanofi Pasteur discontinuing production and supply of Menomune (polysaccharide vaccine) Last lots will expire June–September 2017 Thus, a licensed meningococcal vaccine for persons ≥56 years will not be available ACIP: Such persons should receive MenACWY conjugate vaccine Meningococcal Disease Incidence – United States, 1996-2015 1.3 cases/100,000 population 1.4 Incidence per 100,000 1.2 1 0.8 MenACWY vaccine 0.6 0.12 cases/100,000 population 0.4 MenB vaccine 0.2 0 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Year •Abbreviations: MenACWY = quadrivalent conjugate meningococcal vaccine against serogroups A, C, W, Y; MenB vaccines = serogroup B meningococcal vaccines •Source: 1996-2015 NNDSS Data 14 3/1/2017 Trends in Meningococcal Disease Incidence by Serogroup – United States, 2006-2015 B 0.12 C Y W Other Incidence per 100,000 0.1 0.08 0.06 0.04 0.02 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Year National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS) data with additional serogroup data from Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs) and state health departments Average Annual Incidence by Age-Group and Serogroup―United States, 2006-2015 2.5 B CWY Oth/Unk Incidence per 100,000 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 <1 year 1 year 2-4 years 5-10 years 11-15 years 16-20 years 21-25 years 26-44 years 45-64 years 65-84 years ≥ 85 years Age Group National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS) data with additional serogroup data from Active Bacterial Core surveillance (ABCs) and state health departments 15 3/1/2017 Two MenB Vaccines For Persons Aged 10–25 Years in the United States MenB-FHbp (Trumenba®, Pfizer) Components: fHbp subfamily A/v2,3; subfamily B/v1 Licensed in the US on October 29, 2014 3-dose series, administered at 0, 1–2, and 6 months For persons at increased risk for serogroup B meningococcal disease 2-dose series, administered at 0 and 6 months For healthy adolescents who are not at increased risk for meningococcal disease MenB-4C (Bexsero®, GlaxoSmithKline) Components: fHbp subfamily B/v1; NhbA; NadA; Por A1.4 Licensed in the US on January 23, 2015 2 dose series, administered at 0 and ≥1 month Licensed in >35 countries for persons ≥2 months of age Current ACIP Serogroup B Meningococcal (MenB) Vaccine Recommendations February 2015 Certain persons aged ≥10 years who are at increased risk for meningococcal disease should receive MenB vaccine (Category A)1. These include: Persons with persistent complement component deficiencies Persons with anatomic or functional asplenia Microbiologists routinely exposed to isolates of Neisseria meningitidis Persons identified as at increased risk because of a serogroup B meningococcal disease outbreak June 2015 Adolescents and young adults aged 16–23 years may receive MenB vaccine to provide short-term protection against most strains of serogroup B meningococcal disease (Category B)2 No guidance for booster doses 1. Folaranmi T., et al. Use of Serogroup B Meningococcal Vaccines in Persons Aged ≥10 Years at Increased Risk for Serogroup B Meningococcal Disease: Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, 2015. MMWR; June 12, 2015; Vol. 64, No. 22, p 608-612. 2. MacNeil JR, et al. Use of Serogroup B Meningococcal Vaccines in Adolescents and Young Adults: Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, 2014. MMWR; October 23, 2015, Vol. 64, No. 41, p 1171-1176. 16 3/1/2017 Statement of Problem Certain persons at increased risk for meningococcal disease likely remain at increased risk throughout their lifetime Persons with persistent complement component deficiencies or taking eculizumab Persons with anatomic or functional asplenia Microbiologists routinely exposed to isolates of Neisseria meningitidis Data suggest waning of protection after vaccination with serogroup B meningococcal (MenB) vaccines Limited data on: Duration of protection of MenB vaccines among persons at increased risk Efficacy of MenB booster doses among persons at increased risk Immunogenicity to primary series among immunocompromised subjects Unlikely more data will be available Need to optimize protection for persons at increased risk for meningococcal disease MenB-4C (Bexsero®) - Antibody persistence (hSBA ≥1:4) at 24–36 months post primary series and hSBA responses to a booster dose at 24–36 months post primary series in children aged 4–7 and 8–12 years 17 3/1/2017 Summary: MenB Vaccine Antibody Persistence and Booster Response Among Healthy Children and Adolescents Decay of antibody levels against all strains for both MenB vaccines Infants, children, adolescents As early as 12 months Different waning rates observed for antibodies to each antigen Increase in antibody levels among previously vaccinated subjects in response to a booster dose Policy Options Booster doses of MenB vaccine should be administered every ? years throughout life to persons aged ≥10 years in each of the following groups: Persons with persistent complement component deficiencies including persons taking eculizumab Persons with anatomic or functional asplenia Microbiologists routinely exposed to isolates of Neisseria meningitidis (as long as exposure continues) Booster doses of MenB vaccine should be administered to persons identified as at ongoing increased risk because of a serogroup B meningococcal disease outbreak based on a minimum interval since their last MenB dose (interval to be further discussed) 18 3/1/2017 Global Immunization Update Polio Advancing toward eradication Last strongholds: Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nigeria Strategy: Surveillance, virus detection Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) change to Inactivated Polio Vaccine (IPV) Research laboratory survey Measles 79% reduction in cases, 2000-2015 (Target: 95%) Rubella Only 46% of the world’s children are vaccinated against rubella Global Immunization Update Dengue vaccine Recombinant tetravalent live attenuated vaccine (Dengvaxia®, Sanofi Pasteur) Safe, partial protection when given to children living in endemic areas with high background of previous dengue infection Zika vaccines Several Zika vaccine candidates are entering Phase I clinical trials Yellow Fever vaccine The shortage of Yellow Fever vaccine is being resolved Product ordering restrictions will continue through mid-2017 19 3/1/2017 Updates from February 2017 ACIP Meeting Wednesday, October 5, 2016 12:00 PM ET Patricia (Patsy) A. Stinchfield, MS, RN, CPNP, CIC NFID Secretary Senior Director of Infection Prevention & Control Children’s Minnesota Vaccination Errors Vaccine Safety Office Tom Shimabukuro, MD, Beth Hibbs, RN Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) in 2000-2013 311,185 reports, 7% are error reports (21,843) Main errors are inappropriate schedule (27%), storage and dispensing (23%) and wrong vaccine (15%) - 2/3rds of errors Top 3 vaccines with errors often sound alike Varivax®/Zostavax® DTaP®/TDaP® IIV age indication issues Pneumo Conjugate/Pneumo Polysaccharide Hep A/Hep B 75% of vaccination errors reports to VAERS did not document adverse health events (AE) Of the 25% error reports that did have AE they were similar to non-error related reports; 92% are non-serious reports Case studies: rotavirus injected, insulin instead of influenza, injecting diluent 20 3/1/2017 Strategies for Reducing Vaccination Errors Education and training on the schedule Training on administration techniques Monitor vaccine storage temperatures Pay attention to expiration dates Engineer differentiation between sound alike names/acronyms Screening for contraindications standardized Engineer interventions Bar coding for box and product to match Mumps Epidemiology Mumps vaccine has reduced disease by 99% Mumps outbreaks persist 2006, 2010, 2016 (nearly 6,000 cases) Most are in fully vaccinated college students If vaccine immunity is waning, no older vaccinated cases 2-dose schedule may be sufficient for general population 3 doses commonly used in outbreaks Benefit of 3rd dose in general population needs assessing 21 3/1/2017 Mumps Disease and Vaccine Questions for the Workgroup Why do we see mumps primarily in a tight age-range of teens and young adults? (19-23 years median in 16 outbreaks) When the outbreaks occur, they are largely on college campuses where there are close living situations, but we don't similarly see mumps outbreaks in military recruits. Why not? If we are seeing waning immunity of the vaccine how does that explain specific geographic outbreaks and no cases in older adults? Are certain populations at higher risk for mumps disease compared to others? Are there proper vaccine storage and handling concerns in certain areas? Has there been a shift in mumps genotypes in the US compared to what is in the vaccine? Should a 3rd dose of mumps containing vaccine be used in an outbreak setting only or is there evidence to support a 3rd dose as a more broad routine recommendation? Questions & Answers Register at: www.nfid.org/cvc 22 3/1/2017 CME/CNE Credit & Webinar Evaluation The National Foundation for Infectious Diseases (NFID) is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education (CME) for physicians. NFID designates this enduring material for a maximum of 1.0 AMA PRA Category 1 CreditTM This continuing nursing education activity was approved by the Ohio Nurses Association, an accredited approver by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation (OBN-001-91). This education activity has been approved for a maximum of 1.o contact hour. To receive contact hours, you must complete the online evaluation and pass the post-test with a score of 80% or higher Online evaluation and post-test will be available following the webinar at: bit.ly/ACIP-0301-Webinar Certificate will be available for print or download following successful completion of online evaluation and post-test until March 1, 2018. CPE Credit & Webinar Evaluation Visit: http://nacds.learnercommunity.com/webinars/acip-recommendations2017 Select course “Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) Recommendations, 2017–Live” under Claiming Credit Select “Add to Cart” Login or sign-up for a LearnSomething account Select “View Enrollment” and course title under “Activities” Enter Attendance Code, complete Post-Test and Evaluation, and enter NABP number and birthdate to claim credit Contact [email protected] with any questions ATTENDANCE CODE: KRTM7P 23 3/1/2017 Join Us For Upcoming NFID Webinars Occupational Health: Vaccinations in the Workplace Thursday, March 30, 2017 at 12:00 PM ET Registration: www.nfid.org/webinars Subscribe to NFID email updates: www.nfid.org/subscribe 24