Vaccine
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We identified all children in the UK General Practice Research Database diagnosed with measles from 1990 to 2008 and calculated annual incidence according to age and geographic region by dividing the number of cases per year by the number of children who were active in the population. We evaluated the effectiveness of the measles vaccines by comparing the vaccination histories of children who were diagnosed with measles (cases) to children who were not (controls). ⋯ Since 1996, the incidence of measles has fallen by more than 80%. Prior measles vaccination is highly effective and has substantially reduced the risk of measles.
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Novel tuberculosis vaccination strategies hinge on BCG priming, yet newborn BCG vaccination may cause BCG disease in HIV-infected infants. Viral-vectored or subunit prime vaccine, followed by delayed BCG boost only for HIV-uninfected infants, may be a safe alternative for all newborns, regardless of maternal HIV infection. This approach should be tested using new tuberculosis vaccine candidates. If safety and immunogenicity of a novel vaccine prime is established in infants of HIV-infected mothers, for whom newborn BCG carries unacceptable risk, this strategy might then be compared to conventional BCG prime and viral-vectored or subunit boost, and BCG alone, in HIV-unexposed infants.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of zoster vaccine in subjects with a history of herpes zoster.
Prior clinical studies of zoster vaccine enrolled subjects without a history of herpes zoster (HZ), so there are limited data on safety and immunogenicity in vaccinees with a prior history of HZ. This study was conducted to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of zoster vaccine recipients who had a prior episode of HZ. ⋯ In HZ history-positive adults > or = 50 years of age, zoster vaccine: (1) was well tolerated; and (2) significantly boosted the level of VZV antibody from baseline to 4 weeks post-vaccination as measured by GMT and GMFR. These data support the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices' recommendation for routine zoster vaccination for all immunocompetent persons >/=60 years of age irrespective of HZ history.