Study: Nasal spray flu vaccine works for kids
May 13, 1998
Web posted at: 9:40 p.m. EDT (0140 GMT)
BOSTON (CNN) -- Though flu shots have long been readily
available, children -- not to mention some adults -- are
reluctant to take a vaccine via needle. But now, a new
experimental vaccine may provide a way to get the protection
without getting the shot.
According to a study in the latest New England Journal of
Medicine, a new nasal spray flu vaccine has proven safe and
effective for children.
"We definitely think, in children in particular, that this
vaccine is as good or better than the standard flu shot,"
said Dr. James King of the University of Maryland Medical
Center. "The children who received the vaccine, who were all
preschool children, had a dramatic decrease in natural flu."
The vaccine, called FluMist, was tested on 1,602 children
from ages 15 months to 6 years. They received either the
vaccine or a placebo.
Among those kids getting the vaccine, only 1 percent
developed the flu compared with 18 percent in the placebo
group. Those getting FluMist were also 30 percent less likely
to develop a bacterial infection in the middle ear, called
otitis media, that often accompanies flu in children.
Each year, about 30 percent of all children get the flu. It
is rarely fatal. Children are believed to play a major role
in spreading the illness throughout the community.
"By interrupting the flu in children, we may have an impact
on your own city or town and reduce the overall impact of flu
each winter," King said.
However, in an editorial in the Journal accompanying the
study, Dr. Elizabeth D. Barnett of Boston Medical Center
cautioned that the case for routine immunization of all
children may be "less clear cut" and that the cost of mass
vaccination may outweigh the benefits.
"Decisions about whether to broaden the guidelines for
vaccination to include all healthy children need to be made
with care," she said. "We must balance the potential health
and economic benefits against the challenges of implementing
such a program and the unpredictability of the influenza
virus."
The California company that makes FluMist, Aviron, hopes to
get approval from the Food and Drug Administration to market
the drug in time for next year's flu season.
Medical Correspondent Dr. Steve Salvatore and Reuters
contributed to this report.