Pediatrics Flashcards

1
Q

What are conjugated vaccines?

A

– Pathogens are surrounded by a polysaccharide capsule and are immunogenic
– Bacterial polysaccharides alone are poorly immunogenic in children
– When conjugated to carrier proteins (usually capsular or outer-membrane proteins), immune response is strengthened
• T-cell-dependent immunity to polysaccharides is triggered
• Strengthens immune memory
- good for mucosal immunity

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2
Q

What are live attenuated vaccines?

A

– Stronger mucosal immunity develops
– Not if immunocompromised
– Not if they have received blood products in the recent past (for some products, up to 11 months)

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3
Q

What are examples of conjugated vaccines?

A
- Meningococcal
– Pneumococcal
– Haemophilus Influenzae B
– Hepatitis B
– Influenza (injection)
– Human papilloma virus (HPV)
– Pertussis
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4
Q

Influenza

A
 Yearly vaccine
     Over 9 old: 1 dose
     6 months to 9 years: 2   doses separated by at least 28 days
 Influenza A and B
 Quadrivalent (2 A/B per vaccine)
 Virus changes from year-to-year 
      Antigenic drift
      Antigenic shift
 Very young, very old, chronically ill
 Inactivated vaccine and live attenuated vaccine available (not presently being used)
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5
Q

Meningococcal vaccines

A

• Two quadrivalent conjugate vaccines available
– Protect against meningococcal strains A/C/Y and W-135
– 75% of meningococcal infections in children 11 years and older involved these strains
– Recommended to start 2 dose series at 11-12 years of age
• Second dose at 16-18 years of age
• Two non-conjugate vaccines targeting serogroup B are available for children and young adults ages 10-25 years old
– Currently recommended at 16 years of age in the United States

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6
Q

Pneumococcal vaccine

A

• Strep pneumoniae is an important cause of respiratory tract disease (pneumonia, otitis media, and sinusitis), bacteremia and meningitis
– Particularly in children
– Becoming more and more resistant to antibiotics
• Conjugated 13-valent vaccine
• 2, 4, 6, and 12-15 months of age (healthy kids)
• Non-conjugate, 23-valent pneumococcal vaccine
– High risk patients
• Chronic lung disease
• Chronic cardiac, renal, and hepatic disease
• Diabetes
• Immunocompromising conditions such as sickle cell disease, HIV, and malignancy
– >24 months of age

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7
Q

Haemophilus Influenza Type B Vaccines

A

• Hib was once a leading cause of bacteremia, meningitis , cellulitis, and epiglottitis
• Hib capsular antigen is conjugated to either a tetanus or Neisseria meningitidis-derived carrier protein
• Given in 3-4 doses depending on brand
– 2,4,(6) and 12-15 months
– Alone or in one of the combination with DPT/IPV
– Number of doses needed depends on what age immunizations are started

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8
Q

Hepatitis Vaccines

A

• Hepatitis B
– A common cause of acute and chronic liver disease, hepatocellular carcinoma,
and death worldwide.
– Hepatitis B vaccine
• Recombinant DNA-produced hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg)
• Series is started a birth
– infection in newborns (usually asymptomatic) results in a chronic carrier state more than 90% of the time
– Birth (before discharge from hospital), 1-2 months, 6 months
• Hepatitis A
– Two single-antigen inactivated hepatitis A vaccines are available for use in children
• 12 months and 18-30 months of age

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9
Q

Diphtheria, Pertussis, and Tetanus Vaccines

A

• DTaP vaccine
– Diphtheria
• Acute membranous pharyngitis
• Can cause respiratory obstruction
• Now rare in the US
– whooping cough
• “100-day cough”, pneumonia, apnea, seizures, encephalopathy, high
mortality in young infants
• IT”S BACK
– Tetanus
• Severe muscle spasms provoked by a neurotoxin
• Can progress to respiratory failure
• Now rare in the US
• 2,4 and 6 months of age, 15-18 months of age, 4-6 years of age
• Tdap at 7 yrs of age, Td every 10 years (are 5 years of a dirty wound)

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10
Q

Polio Vaccine

A

• Vaccine has eliminated paralytic polio from the Western Hemisphere
• Only IPV in the US secondary to:
– Small risk of vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis with live attenuated
vaccine
– Small risk of transmission of vaccine virus to unimmunized or immunocompromised household contacts with live virus
• 2,4,6-18 months, and 4-6 years
• There are still endemic areas for polio in the world
– OPV or live attenuated virus is still used
– Better mucosal immunity

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11
Q

Human Papillomavirus Vaccines

A

• Can cause genital warts, genital cancers (particularly cervical cancer), anal and head-and-neck cancers, and rarely lyryngeal papillomatosis (via vertical transmission during vaginal delivery)
• Two licensed vaccines, protect against the two most common HPV types
– Type 16 and type 18 are the most common (70% of cervical cancers)
– There are about 40 types of HPV that infect humans
• Recommended for boys and girls age 11-12 years
• A 9 valent vaccine is on the horizon

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12
Q

Measles-Mumps-Rubella and Varicella Vaccine

A

• Resurgence of measles occurred in 2014
• Overall, MMR have been largely eliminated from the US
• Varicella infection, varicella meningoencephalitis, and secondary complications of cellulitis and pneumonia have also declined
• 2 doses of both vaccines are given
– 12 months and 4-6 years old
• There is an MMRV vaccine
– Higher risk of febrile seizures

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13
Q

Rotavirus Vaccine

A

• Live virus
• Helps prevent acute diarrheal disease in healthy infants
• 2 dose or 3 dose schedule
– 2,4, (and 6) months of age
– First dose should not be administered after 14 weeks and 6 days of age
• Small risk of intussusception (1-5/100,000 doses)

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14
Q

T/F:
• MMR causes autism
• People with egg allergy cannot get the influenza vaccine
• The vaccines cause the disease
• Not getting immunizations decreases the overall lifetime risk for the child

A

all are false

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15
Q

What are the benefits of vaccinations?

A

– Individual immunity
• Provides long-term, sometimes lifelong protection against a disease
• Vaccines are developed for diseases that can kill and or permanently impair
– Herd immunity (community immunity)
• The concept that protection is provided to everyone in a community with high vaccination rates

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16
Q

When is the ‘go time’ for vaccinations?

A

first five years of life

17
Q

What are inactivated/killed vaccines?

A

– Organism is carefully killed (thermally or chemically)

– Immunogenicity is retained

18
Q

What is included in vaccines with subunit antigens and inactivated toxins (toxoids)?

A

the parts that best stimulate immune response

19
Q

What vaccines tend to not last as long/need boosters?

A

conjugate

20
Q

Why do we want to protect sickle cell pts from Pneumococcal infection?

A
  • autosplenectomy: their spleen doesn’t work as well, so they are more susceptible to encapsulated infections
21
Q

What are examples of nonconjugate inactivated or killed vaccines?

A
  • Hepatitis A
    – Polio (injection)
    – Rabies
22
Q

What are examples of live, attenuated vaccines?

A
- Measles-mumps-rubella
– Varicella
– Rotavirus
– Influenza (nasal spray)
– Zoster (shingles) for adults
23
Q

What are examples of toxoid vaccines?

A
  • tetanus

– diphtheria