scholarly journals Safety and tolerability of Meningococcus B vaccine in patients with chronical medical conditions (CMC)

2019 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Nicolosi ◽  
C. Rizzo ◽  
G. Castelli Gattinara ◽  
N. Mirante ◽  
E. Bellelli ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Invasive meningococcal disease is a serious global health threat in the world; in 2016, the European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention reported 3280 confirmed cases (including 304 deaths) of Invasive Meningococcal Diseases in Europe. In Italy, in 2017 were reported 200 cases 41% of which due to menB serogroup. From January 2013 the European Medicines Agency (EMA) has authorized the marketing of the meningococcal B vaccine 4CMenB. Methods The study aimed to evaluate and complement the safety profile of 4CMenB in high risk children accessing the vaccine service of the Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital. All individuals aged six weeks or more receiving the meningococcal 4CMenB (Bexsero®) vaccine that approached the vaccine Centre at the Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital in Rome, were asked to participate. All parents or caregivers of vaccinated individuals in the study period, were recruited and requested to answer to a questionnaire on adverse events following immunization (AEFI) observed after 7 days, starting from the date of vaccination. Results During the study period (October 2016–October 2017), we collected 157 completed questionnaires (out of 200 distributed). Of those 132 were first doses and 25 were booster administered doses. The median age of the study population was 4.5 years (range 0.29 to 26.8 years), the majority of subjects were high-risk individuals (64%) with chronic health conditions. Overall, 311 adverse events were reported in the 7 days after vaccine administration. In particular 147 events (47%) after administration of first dose and 58 (19%) after the booster doses. A large majority of those events, were of little clinical importance and concentrated in the 24 h after vaccine administration. No hospitalizations or Emergency Department access were reported. Conclusions Results of our study demonstrated that the Bexsero® vaccine is almost well tolerated, with a low incidence of severe AEFIs. Our results also shown that the occurrence of AEFIs is similar within healthy and high risk children.

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 104-109
Author(s):  
Ronald L. Poland ◽  
Robert O. Bollinger ◽  
Mary P. Bedard ◽  
Sanford N. Cohen

Length of stay data collected for high-risk newborn infants admitted to a tertiary care children's hospital neonatal unit over a 6-year period were compared with mean and outlier lengths of stay published in the Federal Register as part of a proposed system for prospective payment of hospital cost by diagnosis-related groupings (DRGs). We found that the classification system for newborns markedly underestimated the number of days required for the treatment of these infants. The use of the geometric mean instead of the arithmetic mean as the measure of central tendency was a significant contributor to the discrepancy, especially in those sub-groups with bimodal frequency distributions of lengths of stay. Another contributor to the discrepancy was the lack of inborn patients in the children's hospital cohort. The system of prospective payments, as outlined, does not take into account several factors that have a strong influence on length of stay such as birth weight (which requires more than three divisions to serve as an effective predictor), surgery, outborn status, and ventilation. Implementation of the system described in the Federal Register would severely discourage tertiary care referral hospitals from providing neonatal intensive care.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Qian Shen ◽  
Jialu Liu ◽  
Jing Chen ◽  
Shuizheng Zhou ◽  
Yi Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Fabry disease (FD) remains poorly recognized, especially in children in China. Considering the diversity and nonspecific clinical manifestations accompanying with life-threatening aspect of this disease, methods to improve effective screening and management of the suspects are needed. This study aims to explore how it can be done effectively from a multidisciplinary perspective for children with FD at a tertiary children’s hospital in China. Methods A multidisciplinary team (MDT) of pediatric FD experts was launched at Children’s Hospital of Fudan University. Children with high-risk characteristics were referred by the MDT screening team using the dried blood spot (DBS) triple-test (α-galactosidase A, globotriaosylsphingosine, GLA gene). For newborns who were undergoing genetic testing in the hospital, the GLA gene was listed as a routine analysis gene. Evaluation, family screening, and genetic counselling were implemented after screening by the MDT management team. Results Before the establishment of the MDT, no case was diagnosed with FD in the hospital. However, twelve months following the MDT program's implementation, thirty-five children with high-risk profiles were referred for screening by DBS triple-test, with a yield of diagnosis of 14.3% (5/35). These 5 diagnosed children were referred due to a high-risk profile of pain accompanied by dermatological angiokeratoma and hypohidrosis (n = 2), pain accompanied by abnormal liver function (n = 1), pain only (n = 1), and unexplained renal tubular dysfunction (n = 1). Two neonates were detected early with GLA mutations in the hospital, with a yield of detection of 0.14% (2/1420). Furthermore, another 3 children diagnosed with FD were referred from other hospitals. Family screening of these 10 diagnosed children indicated that 9 boys inherited it from their mothers and 1 girl inherited it from her father. Four of them started to receive enzyme replacement therapy. Conclusion Screening and management of children with FD is effective based on a defined screening protocol and a multidisciplinary approach. We should pay more attention to the high-risk profiles of pain, angiokeratoma, decreased sweating, and unexplained chronic kidney disease in children.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shejla Pollozi ◽  
Cindy Xie ◽  
Sumedha Sachar

For more than 20 years, Dr. Florence Bourgeois, MD, MPH has held multiple positions at the intersection of pediatrics, therapeutics, regulatory science, health informatics and research integrity. A graduate of Yale University, Harvard School of Public Health and Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Dr. Bourgeois’ record transcends academia and medicine. In addition to being a faculty member at Harvard Medical School and the Division of Emergency Medicine and the Computational Health Informatics Program (CHIP) at Boston Children’s Hospital, she is the Director of PedRx, which aims to advance the development and evidence-based use of novel therapeutics for children globally. As the Scientific Director of the Boston Children’s Hospital Biobank, Dr. Bourgeois’ efforts focus on expanding physicians’ capacity to conduct research in pediatric populations. As the Co-Director of the Harvard-MIT Center for Regulatory Science, Dr. Bourgeois also spearheads cross-disciplinary collaborations between academia, biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies, and regulatory agencies. She is the recipient of an Innovation in Regulatory Science Award from the Burroughs Wellcome Fund and has served as an Expert Visitor to the European Medicines Agency to analyze the EU’s pediatric drug legislation. As part of this interview, we examine the relationship between clinical trials and drug development in pediatrics as well as their ethical and social impacts.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 333-333
Author(s):  
Tamara P. Miller ◽  
Kelly D Getz ◽  
Biniyam Demissei ◽  
Karen R. Rabin ◽  
Marla Daves ◽  
...  

Introduction: Adverse events (AEs) are often under- or misreported on clinical trials, leading to an incomplete understanding of therapy-associated toxicities. We previously demonstrated that laboratory result data can be extracted from the electronic health record (EHR), cleaned, and processed to ascertain laboratory AEs with high accuracy compared to gold standard chart abstraction at a single institution. We sought to employ this methodology at three large children's hospitals to demonstrate scalability and describe laboratory AE rates during therapy for pediatric acute myeloid and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (AML, ALL). Methods: The Leukemia Electronic Abstraction of Records Network (LEARN) comprises data from patients with AML and ALL treated at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) from 2006 to 2014, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta from 2010 to 2018, and Texas Children's Hospital from 2008 to 2014. Risk classification, clinical trial enrollment status, and chemotherapy course start and end dates for all patients were collected via manual chart abstraction. After manual input of medical record numbers and course dates, a package we developed in the R programming language (ExtractEHR) was employed to extract laboratory results from the Epic EHR at each site. De-identified laboratory result data were cleaned centrally at CHOP to remove falsely abnormal results, including hemolyzed specimens and results that normalized within 1 hour for electrolytes and hematology tests and within 12 hours for liver function tests (LFTs). Laboratory results were processed and graded according to Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) v5 definitions for 22 AEs. The highest grade of each AE in each course was calculated and results were tabulated by chemotherapy course for ALL and AML separately. Only chemotherapy courses with complete start and end dates were included; courses that were ongoing at time of abstraction were excluded. Highest grades for each AE over all chemotherapy courses combined were stratified by leukemia risk classification and trial enrollment status and were compared using chi square tests. CTCAE grade 5 definitions are not numerically based, so were excluded. Results: Laboratory result data on 1687 patients (AML: 282, ALL: 1405) who experienced 6652 courses (AML: 909, ALL: 5743) were extracted, processed and graded. For the purposes of these results, AEs indicate grades 3-4. More than 95% of AML courses had anemia, neutropenia and thrombocytopenia (Table). AML patients experienced the most laboratory AEs during Induction I and Intensification III (prevalence of grade 3-4 AEs was ≥10% for 10 AEs evaluated). Apart from hematologic AEs, hypokalemia (17.9-44.9% of courses) and increased LFTs (7.7-18.6% of courses) were the most common AEs in AML courses. While AML patients experienced higher rates of hematologic AEs, ALL patients had higher rates of electrolyte and LFT AEs over all courses. These AEs were distributed across all courses; in each course there were 7-9 AEs with a prevalence of ≥10%. Increased alanine aminotransferase was common in every ALL course (17.4-66.2%). For both for AML and ALL, AE rates were similar among patients enrolled on trials and those who were not. AE rates were similar for all AML risk classifications. In contrast, for ALL there were significantly higher rates (p<0.05) among intermediate/high risk compared to standard risk patients for 17 AEs, including AEs in all laboratory categories. Conclusions: The ExtractEHR tool is scalable for extracting laboratory result data from the EHR at multiple hospitals. These data can be processed centrally using a series of electronic code to describe comprehensive laboratory AE rates during chemotherapy, which does not otherwise exist in the literature. The lack of difference by trial enrollment status indicates that these results apply to all patients with AML and ALL. These data therefore describe expected AE rates for patients during each chemotherapy phase that can be used to provide clinical guidance and serve as a baseline comparison for experimental agents in clinical trials. These data and LEARN provide a granular resource for clinical epidemiology research focused on evaluating factors associated with incidence and resolution of laboratory AEs. Efforts are ongoing to incorporate medication and outcome data to investigate the impact of these AEs on clinical experience and outcomes. Disclosures Fisher: Pfizer: Research Funding; Astellas: Other: Data Safety Monitoring Board Chair for an antifungal study; Merck: Research Funding.


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