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The Department of Defense Smallpox Vaccination Program. Military Vaccine Agency LTC Stephen Ford Deputy Director, Scientific Affairs 17 May 2007. UNCLASSIFIED. www.smallpox.mil www.vaccines.mil/smallpox. Background December 2002 President directs smallpox immunization
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The Department of Defense Smallpox Vaccination Program Military Vaccine Agency LTC Stephen Ford Deputy Director, Scientific Affairs 17 May 2007 UNCLASSIFIED
Background • December 2002 President directs smallpox immunization • December 16, 2002 the Department of Defense (DoD) initiates vaccination of select US forces, emergency essential civilians and contractors deployed in support of US Central Command missions • To date over 110,000 medical exemptions for contraindications in over 1.2 million Service members vaccinated
Program Principles: • Multi-mediaEducation: leaders, healthcare workers, and vaccinees • Screening: standardized form to identify ACIP-recognized contraindications • Adverse event monitoring: multiple communication channels, standard case definitions, pregnancy registry, long-term follow-up • Qualitystandards for immunization: before, during, and after vaccination
Education: Smallpox Trifold Augmented with PowerPoint slides and other training aids/materials
Monitoring: Smallpox Vaccine Pregnancy Registry
Monitoring: Reportable Events Joint regulation (Immunizations and Chemoprophylaxis) requires reporting of adverse events resulting in: • hospitalization • a life-threatening event (for example anaphylaxis) • time lost from duty more than 24 hours (more than 1 duty shift) • any event related to suspected contamination of a vaccine vial • any event warranting a permanent medical exemption (a contraindicating event)
Monitoring: Adverse Events as of 9 May 2007 • Screened: over 1.3M Vaccinated: over 1.2M • Exemption process working well • Eczema vaccinatum - 1Progressive vaccinia – 0 • VIG treatments more rare than expected • Education working well • Autoinoculation - 86 • Contact transfer vaccinia - 61: “Don’t let guard down at home.” • Case evaluation of serious adverse events: • Encephalitis – 4 • Myo-pericarditis -140 • Most vaccinia-associated myopericarditis patients experience complete resolution of MP symptoms and objective findings by 6 months • Deathsin the peri-vaccination period- 3
Monitoring: Adverse Events as of 9 May 2007 • Screened: over 1.3M Vaccinated: over 1.2M • Exemption process working well • Eczema vaccinatum - 1Progressive vaccinia – 0 • VIG treatments more rare than expected • Education working well • Autoinoculation - 86 • Contact transfer vaccinia - 61: “Don’t let guard down at home.” • Case evaluation of serious adverse events: • Encephalitis – 4 • Myopericarditis -140 • Most vaccinia-associated myopericarditis patients experience complete resolution of MP symptoms and objective findings by 6 months • Deaths in the post-multiple vaccination period- 2
Monitoring: DoD Cohort Studies Contrasting Vaccinated and Unvaccinated Personnel • Defense Medical Surveillance System (DMSS): • large linked database analogous to Vaccine Safety Datalink project • Includes demographic, occupational, medical encounters, immunization registry, and serial serum specimens • Lack of an association of ischemia or chest pain after smallpox vaccination (manuscript under review) • Electronic medical record Armed Forces Health Longitudinal Technology Application(AHLTA) being phased-in
Monitoring: DoD Commitment to Scientific Communication • DoD sharing experience with CDC, IOM, and State Health Departments (Dec ’02 to present) • First case definitions for generalized vaccinia and myocarditis • Participation on multiple working groups with CDC, ACIP, and the Defense Health Board (formerly the AFEB) • Scientific publications, such as: • Arness et al. Myopericarditis following smallpox vaccination. Am J. Epidemiol 2004;160:642-51 • Eckert et al. Incidence and follow-up of inflammatory cardiac complications following smallpox vaccination J Am Coll Cardiol 2004;44:201-5 • Barkdoll. Secondary and tertiary transfer of vaccinia virus among US personnel-United States and worldwide, 2002-2004. MMWR 2004;53:103-5. • Sejvar et al. Neurologic adverse events associated with smallpox vaccination in the US, 2002-2004. JAMA 2005;294:2744-50.
Vaccine Clinical Support & Consultation Services Adverse events & efficacy case management, exemptions Vaccine Safety Surveillance, reporting & adverse events registry, long term follow-up Immunization Healthcare Education For Health Care Workers & Service Members, Beneficiaries, DoD, etc. Support for Research Clinical focus, post-licensure, to “enhance vaccine safety, efficacy & acceptability” Advocacy For Quality immunization healthcare delivery Care of complex AE’s Vaccine Healthcare Center Network Network of MTF-linked Sites NOT service specific but regional Outreach & Support 24/7 Clinical Call Center (toll-free) Secure Consultative E-mail
Post Vaccine Pericarditis-Myocarditis-Myopericarditis Guidelines: A Work in Progress Evolving Working Group Document Based on Case Reviews & Expert Consensus Opinion
Knowledge, Attitudes, And Beliefs (KAB) Regarding the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) Among Department of Defense (DOD) Health Care Workers • Objectives: • To assess the knowledge, attitudes and beliefs of military health care providers regarding the identification and reporting of adverse events following immunizations (AEFI) • Convenience sample of military healthcare workers • 547 surveys distributed; 512 collected (response rate: 93.6%) • Overall, ~54% of study respondents were at least somewhat familiar with VAERS before being contacted regarding the survey • ~48% of all study participants reported having identified a patient with AEFI of any severity at least once • Of these, less than half (44.9%) reported the last identified AEFI to VAERS • Preferred method of reporting to VAERS was the VAERS web site (65.1%)
Smallpox Vaccination and Myopericardial Injury/Inflammation • Objectives: • To determine the rate of abnormalities in ECG and/or troponin elevation and/or other clinical indicators suggestive of symptomatic or asymptomatic myopericarditis within 30 days following influenza or smallpox vaccination • To assess changes in immune & inflammatory activation markers in a subset of vaccinees who develop indicators of either pericarditis or myocarditis & an age, gender & ethnically matched set of asymptomatic controls. • Collaborators: • Dr. Christopher Wilson, University of Washington • CDC/CISA/Kaiser • Enrollment sites: WRAMC, Fort Bragg, University of Washington: Remote civilian cases • Funding: NIAID, NIH
Acknowledgements • LTC (Dr.) Michael Nelson, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Department of Allergy and Immunology • Dr. Limone Collins, Vaccine Healthcare Center Network • CDR (Dr.) Megan Ryan, Naval Health Research Center • COL (Dr.) Renata Engler, Vaccine Healthcare Center • COL Randall Anderson, Military Vaccine Agency • COL (Ret.) John Grabenstein
Symptoms Criteria Any symptom in CDC case definition Any other new persistent symptom (n=0) Other new symptom affecting QOL of life attributable to vaccine by HCP (n=0) CP & fatigue most frequent Late CP usually transient & atypical for ischemia or MP recurrence of typical VAMP CP in 1-2 Nonsystematic Objective findings No persistence of clinically relevant findings Nonspecific ECG changes (normal variants) Multiple interpreters Nonsystematic Vaccinia Associated Myopericarditis Outcomes
Vaccinia Associated Myopericarditis OutcomesConclusions • Most VAMP patients experience complete resolution of MP symptoms and objective findings by 6 months • Up to ~30% may have nonspecific symptoms (esp. CP & fatigue) &/or ECG findings >6 months after onset of VAMP • Avoidance of activities that increase cardiovascular risk should be undertaken for at least 6 months by thesepts