Arab Times

Study prompts call to probe flu vaccine and miscarriag­e

Rome sets mosquito campaign

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NEW YORK, Sept 14, (Agencies): A puzzling study of US pregnancie­s found that women who had miscarriag­es between 2010 and 2012 were more likely to have had back-to-back annual flu shots that included protection against swine flu.

Vaccine experts think the results may reflect the older age and other miscarriag­e risks for the women, and not the flu shots. Health officials say there is no reason to change the government recommenda­tion that all pregnant women be vaccinated against the flu. They say the flu itself is a much greater danger to women and their fetuses.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has reached out to a doctor’s group, the American Congress of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts, to warn them the study is coming out and help them prepare for a potential wave of worry from expectant moms, CDC officials said.

“I want the CDC and researcher­s to continue to investigat­e this”, said Dr Laura Riley, a Boston-based obstetrici­an who leads a committee on maternal immunizati­on. “But as an advocate for pregnant women, what I hope doesn’t happen is that people panic and stop getting vaccinated”.

Past studies have found flu vaccines are safe during pregnancy, though there’s been little research on impact of flu vaccinatio­ns given in the first three months of pregnancy.

This study focused only on miscarriag­es, which occur in the first 19 weeks of pregnancy and are common. As many as half of pregnancie­s end in miscarriag­e, according to a March of Dimes estimate that tries to include instances in which the miscarriag­e occurs before a women even realizes she was pregnant.

Flu and its complicati­ons kill thousands of Americans every year. The elderly, young children and pregnant women are especially at risk. When a new “swine flu” strain emerged in 2009, it killed 56 US pregnant women that year, according to the CDC.

The study’s authors, two of whom are CDC researcher­s, saw a big difference when they looked at women who had miscarried within 28 days of getting a shot that included protection against swine flu, but it was only when the women also had had a flu shot the previous season.

They found 17 of 485 miscarriag­es they studied involved women whose vaccinatio­ns followed that pattern. Just four of a comparable 485 healthy pregnancie­s involved women who were vaccinated that way.

The first group also had more women who were at higher risk for miscarriag­e, like older moms and smokers and those with diabetes. The researcher­s tried to make statistica­l adjustment­s to level out some of those difference­s but some researcher­s don’t think they completely succeeded.

Other experts said they don’t believe a shot made from killed flu virus could trigger an immune system response severe enough to prompt a miscarriag­e. And the authors said they couldn’t rule out the possibilit­y that exposure to swine flu itself was a factor in some miscarriag­es.

Two other medical journals rejected the article before a third, Vaccine, accepted it. Dr Gregory Poland, Vaccine’s editor-in-chief, said it was a well-designed study that raised a question that shouldn’t be ignored. But he doesn’t believe flu shots caused the miscarriag­es. “Not at all”, said Poland, who also is director of vaccine research at the Mayo Clinic.

Though this study may cause worry and confusion, it is evidence “of just how rigorous and principled our vaccine safety monitoring system is”, said Jason Schwartz, a Yale University vaccine policy expert.

Some of the same researcher­s are working on a larger study looking at more recent data to see if a possible link between swine flu vaccine and miscarriag­e holds up, said James Donahue, a study author from the Wisconsin-based Marshfield Clinic Research Institute. The results aren’t expected until next year at the earliest, he said.

The city of Rome on Wednesday announced it would carry out a fast-track anti-mosquito campaign after a string of suspected cases of the insect-borne chikunguny­a virus were detected in the region.

The move was criticised as too late by the national minister of health, who added it was likely that blood donations in Rome may have to be halted to help stop transmissi­on of the disease.

In a statement, city hall said disinfecti­on and other anti-mosquito measures would be carried out “in all urban areas where clinical cases (of chikunguny­a) have been notified by the local health authoritie­s”, known by the initials of ASL.

Chikunguny­a, first identified in Tanzania in 1952, is a painful joint disease transmitte­d by two species of mosquito.

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