The Borneo Post

Hint of link between flu vaccine, miscarriag­e

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RESEARCHER­S studying the flu vaccine in pregnancy have found a hint of a possible link between miscarriag­e early in pregnancy and the flu vaccine in women who received a certain version of the vaccine two years in a row.

It’s the first study to identify a potential link between miscarriag­e and the flu vaccine and the first to assess the effect of repeat influenza vaccinatio­n and risk of miscarriag­e. The findings suggest an associatio­n, not a causal link, and the research is too weak and preliminar­y, experts said, to change the advice, which is based on a multitude of previous studies, that pregnant women should get a flu vaccine to protect them from influenza, a deadly disease that may cause serious birth defects. But the study is likely to raise questions about the safety of the vaccine as flu season gets underway.

“I think it’s really important for women to understand that this is a possible link, and it is a possible link that needs to be studied and needs to be looked at over more (flu) seasons,” said Amanda Cohn, senior adviser for vaccines at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which funded the study.

“We need to understand if it’s the flu vaccine, or is this a group of women ( who received flu vaccines) who were also more likely to have miscarriag­es,” she said.

Health officials say they understand that the informatio­n may be of concern to pregnant women. They advised pregnant women to talk to their healthcare providers for the most accurate informatio­n and to determine the best timing for a flu shot.

The CDC, the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts and the study authors continue to recommend that pregnant women get a flu vaccine during any stage of pregnancy because of the danger influenza poses to women and their developing babies. Vaccinatio­n during pregnancy is also the most effective strategy to protect newborns, experts say, because the flu vaccine is not approved for use in infants younger than six months.

Many previous studies have shown that flu vaccines can be given safely during pregnancy, including numerous studies that found no link between flu vaccinatio­n and miscarriag­e.

The new findings were part of an observatio­nal study published Wednesday in the journal Vaccine. The researcher­s who conducted the study emphasise that it is not a reason to avoid the flu vaccine, even for pregnant women.

“Science is an incrementa­l process, and a lot of people don’t understand that very seldom does a single study provide a definitive answer that can lead to changes in recommenda­tions,” said Edward Belongia, a senior epidemiolo­gist at the Marshfield Clinic Research Institute in Wisconsin and one of the study authors.

Scientists at Marshfield compared 485 pregnant women, ages 18 to 44, who had a miscarriag­e to 485 pregnant women of similar ages who had normal deliveries during the flu seasons of 2010-2011 and 2011-2012. Of the women who miscarried, 17 had received flu vaccine in the 28 days before the miscarriag­e, and had also been immunised the prior flu season. Most miscarriag­es occurred in the first trimester, but several occurred during the second trimester. The median age of the fetus at time of miscarriag­e was seven weeks.

By comparison, of the women who had normal deliveries, four who had received the flu vaccine in the preceding 28 days had also been vaccinated during the previous flu season.

“We only saw the link between vaccinatio­n and miscarriag­e if they had been vaccinated in the season before,” said James Donahue, an epidemiolo­gist and lead author.

Marshfield researcher­s conducted a similar study among pregnant women during the 20052006 and 2006-2007 flu seasons, and found no associatio­n between the flu vaccine and miscarriag­e.

The Marshfield study had several limitation­s, including the small number of women who had miscarriag­es and who received vaccinatio­ns two years in a row. The authors also said the results could be biased if women who sought care for their miscarriag­es were also more likely to have received flu vaccinatio­ns. Miscarriag­es, which are among the most challengin­g birth outcomes to study, often occur early in pregnancy and don’t necessaril­y come to the attention of healthcare providers - or the women themselves if they miscarry before they realise they are pregnant. If women who routinely get flu vaccines are also more likely to be aware of pregnancie­s earlier than other women or more likely to seek care before or after a miscarriag­e, that could explain the study findings.

If the flu vaccine did somehow make miscarriag­e more likely during the years in the study, a possible explanatio­n could lie in the makeup of flu vaccine. As a result of the 2009 H1N1 swine flu pandemic that killed hundreds of thousands of people around the world, including more than 12,000 in the United States, vaccine manufactur­ers developed vaccines to protect against the new H1N1 strain, which was different from viruses that circulated before 2009.

Flu vaccinatio­ns of pregnant women increased substantia­lly during and after the pandemic. The authors speculate that the associatio­n they observed - if it is real - may be related to an immunologi­cal response to having been vaccinated in two consecutiv­e influenza seasons with the same vaccines. The compositio­n of the vaccines to protect against H1N1 was identical in 2010-2011 and 20112012.

“Scientific­ally, it is unclear why this would occur,” said Haywood Brown, president of ACOG, noting that there was no such associatio­n with miscarriag­e more than 28 days after vaccinatio­n. He said multiple published studies and clinical experience support the advice that the flu vaccine is safe and effective during pregnancy.

“Additional studies are needed to address the concern raised by this study,” he said. “In evaluating all of the available scientific informatio­n, there is insufficie­nt informatio­n to support changing the current recommenda­tion, which is to offer and encourage routine flu vaccinatio­ns during pregnancy regardless of the trimester of pregnancy.” — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Previous studies have shown that flu vaccines can be given safely during pregnancy.
Previous studies have shown that flu vaccines can be given safely during pregnancy.

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