Issue Number 97            July 16, 1999

CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE

  1. Do you know which newborns need to receive hepatitis B vaccine in the hospital despite thimerosal content? Read these new CDC guidelines!

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(1)
July 15, 1999
DO YOU KNOW WHICH NEWBORNS NEED TO RECEIVE HEPATITIS B VACCINE IN THE HOSPITAL DESPITE THIMEROSAL CONTENT? READ THESE NEW CDC GUIDELINES!

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a document on July 15, 1999, entitled "Implementation Guidance for Immunization Grantees During the Transition Period to Vaccines Without Thimerosal."

These guidelines were written to assist health professionals through a transition period during which vaccine manufacturers are working to reduce or eliminate thimerosal from their products in accordance with recently released recommendations from the U.S. Public Health Service (PHS) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP). 

(IAC Editors' note: September is the anticipated month in which thimerosal-free single antigen hepatitis B vaccines will be available.)

The information highlighted below on the use of hepatitis B vaccine at birth is excerpted from CDC's July 15, 1999, document. The entire document which also contains information on other thimerosal-containing vaccines can be obtained by clicking on its link at the end of this article.

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INFANTS WHO SHOULD HAVE HEPATITIS B VACCINE AT BIRTH!
The newly released guidelines stress the importance of continuing to vaccinate the following infants against hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection at birth despite the thimerosal content of hepatitis B vaccine because their risk of infection far outweighs any theoretical risk of an adverse effect from mercury. These include:

  1. All infants born to hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) positive mothers need hepatitis B vaccine and hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG) within 12 hours of birth.
        
  2. All infants born to mothers whose HBsAg status is still unknown 12 hours after birth need hepatitis B vaccine at that time. Draw the mother's blood upon admission and send it to the lab ASAP. If the results cannot be obtained by 12 hours after the infant's birth, the infant should be vaccinated at that time. If the mother is found to be HBsAg positive, administer HBIG to the infant ASAP (no later than 7 days after birth).
              
  3. All infants born to HBsAg negative mothers belonging to populations or groups that have high risk of early childhood HBV infection need hepatitis B vaccine prior to discharge. These high-risk groups include but are not limited to Asian Pacific Islanders, immigrant populations from countries in which HBV is of high or intermediate endemicity (see CDC's "Health Information for International Travel, 1999"), and households with persons with chronic HBV infection (HBsAg positive persons).

 

GUIDANCE FOR HOSPITALS WITH EXISTING UNIVERSAL HEPATITIS B VACCINATION POLICIES
Many hospitals have instituted policies to vaccinate all children at birth regardless of HBsAg status as a means of ensuring that all the infants of BsAg positive women and infants of women with unknown HBsAg status are vaccinated at birth. These hospitals should continue current policies until procedures are or can be put in place to guarantee the proper management of all births to prevent perinatal HBV transmission.

Such procedures should ensure the following:

  1. The HBsAg status of every pregnant woman is available and reviewed at delivery.
        
  2. Appropriate passive-active immunoprophylaxis (HBIG and hepatitis B vaccine) is provided for infants of HBsAg positive women within 12 hours of birth.
         
  3. Appropriate active immunoprophylaxis (hepatitis B vaccine) is provided for infants of women with unknown HBsAg status.

 

CDC PREFERS THAT LOW-RISK INFANTS GET HEPATITIS B DOSE #1 BY 2 MONTHS OF AGE
CDC prefers that if a decision is made to delay the birth dose of hepatitis B vaccine for infants not in a high-risk group, that you give the first dose of hepatitis B vaccine by two months of age. This is not a new recommendation. It is a current recommendation of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices.


MAKE SURE YOU READ THE ENTIRE CDC DOCUMENT!
This CDC document, "Implementation Guidance for Immunization Grantees During the Transition Period to Vaccines Without Thimerosal," contains much more information including information on other thimerosal-containing vaccines. Click here for a copy of this document: http://www.immunize.org/news.d/guide7.htm


CDC ANSWERS SOME ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS ON THIMEROSAL AND VACCINES
The following questions were answered by CDC on July 15, 1999.

  1. Would delaying the hepatitis B first dose from birth to 2 months impact completion rates of the hepatitis B series?
           
  2. Should state and local immunization programs or VFC providers stop using hepatitis B vaccines that contain thimerosal?
               
  3. Can we get thimerosal free vaccine now?

For the answers to the above questions, click here: http://www.immunize.org/news.d/progques.htm


HOW MUCH THIMEROSAL IS IN HEPATITIS B VACCINE?
Actually there is less thimerosal in single-antigen hepatitis B vaccines than in some of the other vaccines. Click here for a table entitled "Thimerosal Content in Some U.S. Licensed Vaccines." http://www.immunize.org/news.d/thimtabl.htm


IN CASE YOU MISSED IT, READ OUR PREVIOUSLY PUBLISHED  INFORMATION ON THIMEROSAL!
IAC EXPRESS published three articles on thimerosal and vaccines on July 8, 1999, including "Thimerosal in Vaccines: A Joint Statement of the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Public Health Service," the U.S. Surgeon General's Statement on Vaccine Safety, and CDC's "Thimerosal and Vaccines: Public Information Questions and Answers." Click here to obtain this issue of IAC EXPRESS: http://www.immunize.org/genr.d/issue94.htm


REMEMBER!
"The large risks of not vaccinating children far outweigh the unknown and probably much smaller risk, if any, of cumulative exposure to thimerosal-containing vaccines over the first six months of life."

-Joint Statement of the American Academy of Pediatrics and the United States Public Health Service, July 7, 1999

About IZ Express

IZ Express is supported in part by Grant No. 1NH23IP922654 from CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases. Its contents are solely the responsibility of Immunize.org and do not necessarily represent the official views of CDC.

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Editorial Information

  • Editor-in-Chief
    Kelly L. Moore, MD, MPH
  • Managing Editor
    John D. Grabenstein, RPh, PhD
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    Courtnay Londo, MA
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