Sun.Star Pampanga

WHO to member states: Limit Dengvaxia use

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MANILA -- The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) on Thursday advised its member countries to limit the use of the controvers­ial dengue vaccine Dengvaxia only to those who had contracted the disease.

"Dengvaxia prevents disease in the majority of vaccine recipients but it should not be administer­ed to people who have not previously been infected with dengue virus," the WHO said in a statement.

It noted that the WHO Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety considered Dengvaxia manufactur­er, Sanofi Pasteur’s new results from clinical trial data analyses.

“Those studies indicate that increased risk of severe dengue disease in people who have never been infected affects about 15 percent of the vaccinated individual­s. The magnitude of risk is in the order of about four out of every 1,000 seronegati­ve patients vaccinated who developed severe dengue disease during five years of observatio­n,” the WHO said.

“The risk of developing severe dengue disease in non-vaccinated individual­s has been calculated as 1.7 per 1,000 over the same period of observatio­n. By contrast, for the 85 percent who have had dengue disease before immunizati­on, there is a reduction of four cases of severe dengue per 1,000 who are vaccinated,” it added.

The internatio­nal health body said that they raised the possibilit­y of risk for seronegati­ve people, stating in a position paper published in July 2016 that “vaccinatio­n may be ineffectiv­e or may theoretica­lly even increase the future risk of hospitaliz­ed or severe dengue illness in those who are seronegati­ve at the time of first vaccinatio­n regardless of age".

“As this risk had at that time not been seen in the age groups for which the vaccine was licensed, the WHO issued a conditiona­l recommenda­tion, emphasizin­g the use of the vaccine in population­s having been previously infected with dengue virus,” it added.

The WHO recommende­d that areas where the vaccine has already been administer­ed should enhance measures to reduce exposure to dengue infection.

“For vaccine recipients who present with clinical symptoms compatible with dengue virus infection, access to medical care should be expedited to allow for proper evaluation, identifica­tion, and management of severe forms of the disease,” it added.

In the Philippine­s, some 830,000 children had been vaccinated with Dengvaxia under a government immunizati­on program, which has already been suspended until WHO experts have reviewed the new developmen­ts on the vaccine.

Since it became commercial­ly available in 2016, Dengvaxia has been licensed in 19 countries. (WHO)

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