CDC reports 103 pregnancies in
smallpox vaccinees
Last Updated: 2003-05-01 15:49:01 -0400 (Reuters
Health)
By Alison McCook
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Despite the fact that pregnant women
are advised to opt out of the smallpox vaccine, the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) said Thursday that 103 women have either received
the vaccine while pregnant or conceived shortly thereafter.
In all cases, women received the vaccine when they did not know they were
pregnant, conceived within 28 days after being vaccinated, or were in close
contact with a person who had been recently vaccinated.
However, since the program began, almost 70,000 women of reproductive age
have received the vaccine. Consequently, the number of accidentally exposed
pregnancies is much lower than would be expected if there were no attempts to
screen and educate women about the risks of vaccine exposure in pregnancy, the
report indicates.
"I think this clearly shows we've got a very effective screening program and
education program," CDC spokesperson Glen Nowak told Reuters Health.
A developing fetus exposed to the smallpox vaccine is at risk of fetal
vaccina, an infection that affects internal organs and causes skin lesions, and
can cause premature birth and death.
Only around 50 cases of fetal vaccina have ever been reported globally, three
of which occurred in the U.S. Those cases were reported in 1924, 1959 and 1968.
Nowak noted that the CDC has received two reports of miscarriage among the
six non-military women exposed to the vaccine in pregnancy. He added that
miscarriage occurs in 16 to 31 percent of pregnancies in general, so it was
unclear whether the vaccine was responsible.
"We don't have any reason to believe that the vaccine had a causal
relationship" to the miscarriages, Nowak said.
He added that the CDC is continuing to monitor the other pregnant women, most
of whom have not yet delivered.
The majority of the women exposed to the smallpox vaccine when pregnant were
in the military.
In an interview with Reuters Health, Col. John Grabenstein of the Department
of Defense said that military health officials are waiting until all exposed
women reach their first trimester of pregnancy before releasing any information
about possible effects of the vaccine.
Nowak noted that the CDC recommends that vaccine administrators offer
pregnancy tests to any woman of reproductive age who is not sure whether she's
pregnant. In addition, women receive educational materials that "clearly state
that women who are pregnant should not get the smallpox vaccine," and should
wait 28 days after vaccination before conceiving.
However, no pregnancy test can pick up a pregnancy that is less than two
weeks along, and in some cases, accidentally exposed pregnant women may have
received a negative pregnancy test before being vaccinated, Nowak said.
And given that vaccine administrators cannot prevent women from becoming
pregnant soon after being vaccinated, he noted that it might be impossible to
prevent all accidental vaccine exposures in pregnant women.
The rate of exposure in pregnancy "may very well be as low as we can make
it," Nowak said.
He added that the CDC is working to lower the rate further by enforcing the
message that women should wait 28 days after vaccination before becoming
pregnant.
SOURCE: Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 2003;52:386-388.
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