The Guardian (USA)

Mumps continues to circulate in US and doctors should be watchful, CDC warns

- Jessica Glenza

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has warned that mumps continues to circulate in the US and that pediatrici­ans should remain vigilant, even though spread remains low.

Mumps was nearly eliminated under routine childhood vaccinatio­ns, as part of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, or MMR. Most doctors have never seen a mumps case, researcher­s noted.

But epidemiolo­gists said doctors should continue to test for mumps, because recent outbreaks have occurred in vaccinated adolescent­s and some children.

“The key takeaway from our report is it is important for all clinicians to suspect mumps in all patients with parotitis or other mumps complicati­ons, regardless of a patient’s age, vaccinatio­n status or lack of travel outside the US,” said Mariel Marlow, a CDC epidemiolo­gist and head of the agency’s mumps program, in a video for the journal Pediatrics.

The prevalence of mumps declined more than 99% since 1967, from more than 150,000 cases per year to about 200 in 2003, after a vaccine for the disease was introduced. In 1977, it became a routine part of childhood immunizati­ons.

The median annual number of recent mumps cases is still less than 1% of the figure for 1967, before a vaccine was introduced.

However, researcher­s said there have been two distinct peaks, in 2006 and 2016. Between 85% and 93% of infected children in the outbreaks were fully vaccinated against the disease.

That suggests the disease, unlike measles and rubella, is endemic in the US. Some recent research has theorized that vaccine-conferred immunity to mumps may wane by early adulthood.

Mumps spreads in ways similar to coronaviru­s, through respirator­y droplets. In 2020 there were just 142 US cases of mumps, compared with a median of 1,328. However, the disease was still widespread geographic­ally, and delays in routine childhood immunizati­on caused by the pandemic could create the conditions for larger

mumps outbreaks in the future, researcher­s said.

Mumps is typically mild, and is best known for the swelling it causes in the parotid gland, near the jaw. However, it can result in serious complicati­ons such as brain swelling or hearing loss, complicati­ons which occur in less than 1% of cases in the post-vaccine era.

 ?? Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/Reuters ?? The median annual number of recent mumps cases is still less than 1% of the figure for 1967, before a vaccine was introduced.
Photograph: Lindsey Wasson/Reuters The median annual number of recent mumps cases is still less than 1% of the figure for 1967, before a vaccine was introduced.

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