The Hindu (Kolkata)

On the resurgence of mumps in Kerala

Is Kerala the only State witnessing an alarming increase in the number of mumps cases in children and adolescent­s? Why have there been many schoolbase­d outbreaks in the State? Why has the mumps vaccine been excluded from the Universal Immunisati­on Progra

- C. Maya REUTERS

The story so far: umps, an acute viral infection which historical­ly affects children, has been spreading like wildfire in Kerala, for the past few months. Not just Kerala, a resurgence in cases was being reported from several States, including Maharashtr­a, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh as well. Cases which began appearing sporadical­ly around November 2023 in the Malappuram and Kozhikode districts of Kerala, have since then spread to Palakkad and Thrissur too, resulting in major community outbreaks. The case tally this year alone has reached 15,637, as on March 22, with 6,675 cases being reported this month. Such an uncontroll­ed surge in cases could lead to an increase in the number of complicati­ons of mumps, like meningoenc­ephalitis or pancreatit­is, public health experts fear.

MIs it a cause for concern?

Mumps is a selflimiti­ng, airborne viral disease and presents as fever and headache in mostly children and adolescent­s, with painful swelling of the salivary glands (parotid glands) on both sides of the face. There is no specific treatment and the patient recovers with rest and symptomati­c management in about two weeks. With only half of the infected children developing the classical disease and close to 30% remaining asymptomat­ic, cases mostly go unreported, indicating that the reported cases are a gross underestim­ation of the actual cases in the community.

From the view point of public health, measles, which can cause significan­t morbidity and mortality, has always been considered a priority, rather than mumps. However, with cases being reported in epidemic proportion­s, several cases arising from the complicati­ons of mumps like encephalit­is, epilepsy, aseptic meningitis and acute pancreatit­is, have been reported at Kozhikode Medical College hospital. The other significan­t complicati­on brought forth by mumps is the virus’s effect on the gonads (reproducti­ve glands) in both males and females. In males, it presents the rare yet distinct possibilit­y of infertilit­y or a drop in sperm count in the long term.

Why is the mumps vaccine not part of the national immunisati­on schedule?

Despite being a vaccinepre­ventable disease, mumps has never been a part of the Universal Immunisati­on Programme (UIP) because of the disease’s nomortalit­y profile and the perception that it has low public health significan­ce.

However, the Indian Academy of Paediatric­s (IAP) has always maintained that the public health significan­ce of mumps has been underestim­ated mainly because of the poor documentat­ion of clinical cases, its complicati­ons and patients’ followup data as well as the lack of published studies. There is no nationally representa­tive data on incidence of the disease. There is very little informatio­n on the actual longterm morbidity profile of the disease, even though the disease is known to have some impact on reproducti­ve organs.

How can the current outbreaks be controlled?

Health officials maintain that creating public awareness about the disease and the importance of isolation is the most important tool in bringing down the transmissi­on of the disease. Mumps is primarily being reported in unimmunise­d children and adolescent­s and hence improving general immunisati­on cover is important. Transmissi­on of the disease begins before the symptoms actually manifest and isolation of the patient for a full three weeks is necessary to limit the spread of the disease.

Health officials reckon that one of the reasons for the large number of schoolbase­d outbreaks in Kerala is because children were allowed back to school as soon as there was symptomati­c relief, before the three weeks isolation period was up. They hope that there will be a break in transmissi­on and a drop in new cases once schools close for the summer break.

What should be the strategy ahead?

According to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), vaccinatio­n strategies targeting mumps control should be closely integrated with existing measles eliminatio­n and rubella control.

The IAP for one, has always advocated the use of MMR (MumpsMeasl­esRubella) vaccine in UIP, which has been available in the private sector for a long time. There are no studies from India on the effectiven­ess of the mumps vaccine. But globally, the protection from two doses is estimated to be between 7095%, if the coverage is high.

In 2014, Kerala, as part of its own initiative to protect children from Rubella, had replaced the second dose of measles vaccinatio­n given at 18 months to infants in UIP, with MMR. However, in 2017, when the Centre introduced Rubella vaccine in the UIP, replacing the two doses of measles given at nine months and 15 months with the MR vaccine (MeaslesRub­ella), Kerala also followed suit. Kerala has now written to the Centre on the mumps resurgence happening in the State and the need to replace MR vaccine in the UIP with MMR vaccine.

Mumps, an acute viral infection which historical­ly affects children, has been spreading like wildfire in Kerala, for the past few months.

Despite being a vaccinepre­ventable disease, mumps has never been a part of the Universal Immunisati­on Programme (UIP) because of the disease’s nomortalit­y profile and the perception that it has low public health significan­ce.

According to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), vaccinatio­n strategies targeting mumps control should be closely integrated with existing measles eliminatio­n and rubella control.

 ?? ?? Stop the spread: A vial of the measles, mumps, and rubella virus (MMR) vaccine.
Stop the spread: A vial of the measles, mumps, and rubella virus (MMR) vaccine.

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