Meningococcal Vaccination: Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, United States, 2020
Sarah Mbaeyi,Catherine H Bozio,Jonathan Duffy,Lorry G. Rubin,Susan Hariri,David S. Stephens,Jessica R. MacNeil +6 more
- 25 Sep 2020
- Vol. 69, Iss: 9, pp 1-41
TL;DR: Routine use of a MenB series for adolescents and young adults aged 16–23 years on the basis of shared clinical decision-making to provide short-term protection against disease caused by most strains of serogroup B N. meningitidis is recommended.
read more
Abstract: This report compiles and summarizes all recommendations from CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) for use of meningococcal vaccines in the United States. As a comprehensive summary and update of previously published recommendations, it replaces all previously published reports and policy notes. This report also contains new recommendations for administration of booster doses of serogroup B meningococcal (MenB) vaccine for persons at increased risk for serogroup B meningococcal disease. These guidelines will be updated as needed on the basis of availability of new data or licensure of new meningococcal vaccines. ACIP recommends routine vaccination with a quadrivalent meningococcal conjugate vaccine (MenACWY) for adolescents aged 11 or 12 years, with a booster dose at age 16 years. ACIP also recommends routine vaccination with MenACWY for persons aged ≥2 months at increased risk for meningococcal disease caused by serogroups A, C, W, or Y, including persons who have persistent complement component deficiencies; persons receiving a complement inhibitor (e.g., eculizumab [Soliris] or ravulizumab [Ultomiris]); persons who have anatomic or functional asplenia; persons with human immunodeficiency virus infection; microbiologists routinely exposed to isolates of Neisseria meningitidis; persons identified to be at increased risk because of a meningococcal disease outbreak caused by serogroups A, C, W, or Y; persons who travel to or live in areas in which meningococcal disease is hyperendemic or epidemic; unvaccinated or incompletely vaccinated first-year college students living in residence halls; and military recruits. ACIP recommends MenACWY booster doses for previously vaccinated persons who become or remain at increased risk.In addition, ACIP recommends routine use of MenB vaccine series among persons aged ≥10 years who are at increased risk for serogroup B meningococcal disease, including persons who have persistent complement component deficiencies; persons receiving a complement inhibitor; persons who have anatomic or functional asplenia; microbiologists who are routinely exposed to isolates of N. meningitidis; and persons identified to be at increased risk because of a meningococcal disease outbreak caused by serogroup B. ACIP recommends MenB booster doses for previously vaccinated persons who become or remain at increased risk. In addition, ACIP recommends a MenB series for adolescents and young adults aged 16-23 years on the basis of shared clinical decision-making to provide short-term protection against disease caused by most strains of serogroup B N. meningitidis.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
ECCO Guidelines on the Prevention, Diagnosis, and Management of Infections in Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
Torsten Kucharzik,Pierre Ellul,T Greuter,J F Rahier,Bram Verstockt,Candida Abreu,Andreia Albuquerque,Mariangela Allocca,Maria Esteve,Francis A Farraye,Hannah Gordon,Konstantinos Karmiris,Uri Kopylov,Julien Kirchgesner,Eithne MacMahon,Fernando Magro,Christian Maaser,L. de Ridder,Carlos Taxonera,M Toruner,Lydjie Tremblay,Michael Scharl,N. Viget,Yamile Zabana,Stephan R. Vavricka +24 more
288
Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices Recommended Immunization Schedule for Children and Adolescents Aged 18 Years or Younger - United States, 2020.
Candice L. Robinson,Henry H. Bernstein,Katherine A. Poehling,Jose R. Romero,Peter G. Szilagyi +4 more
TL;DR: The 2018 child and adolescent immunization schedule summarizes ACIP recommendations, including several changes from the 2017 immunization schedules, in three figures and footnotes to the figures as discussed by the authors, and health care providers are advised to use the figures and the footnotes together.
Effectiveness of a serogroup B outer membrane vesicle meningococcal vaccine against gonorrhoea: a retrospective observational study.
Winston E. Abara,Kyle T. Bernstein,Felicia M.T. Lewis,Julia A. Schillinger,Kristen A. Feemster,Preeti Pathela,Susan Hariri,Aras Islam,Michael G. Eberhart,Iris Simone Cheng,Alexandra Ternier,Jennifer Sanderson Slutsker,Sarah Mbaeyi,R Madera,Robert D. Kirkcaldy +14 more
TL;DR: This paper evaluated the effectiveness of a serogroup B meningococcal outer membrane vesicle vaccine (MenB-4C) against gonorrhoea in individuals aged 16-23 years in two US cities.
100
Cost-Effectiveness of Conjugate Meningococcal Vaccination Strategies in the United States
Colin Shepard
- 02 Oct 2004
TL;DR: Routine MCV-4 vaccination of US children would reduce the burden of disease in vaccinated cohorts but at a relatively high net societal cost, compared with recently adopted childhood vaccines under conditions of above-average meningococcal disease incidence or at a lower cost per vaccination.
97
Use of 15-Valent Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine Among U.S. Children: Updated Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices — United States, 2022
Miwako Kobayashi,Jennifer L. Farrar,Ryan Gierke,Andrew J. Leidner,Adam L. Cohen,Sarah S. Long,Jeffrey A. Kelman,Lucia Lee,Tina Mongeau,T. Weiser,Uzoigwe J. Chukwuma,Kristina Lu,Mamodikoe Makhene,Lynn Fisher,Mark Sawyer,Jason Goldman,David K. Nace,Emily Messerli,Elissa Abrams,Aleksandra Wierzbowski,Carol Baker,James McAuley,William Schaffner,Virginia Cane,Doug Campos-Outcalt,Monica M. Farley,Keith P. Klugman,Rebecca L Morgan,Arthur Reingold,Lorry G. Rubin,Cynthia G. Whitney,Richard K. Zimmerman,Emma Accorsi,Alison P. Albert,Shriya Bhatnagar,Lana Childs,Marc Fischer,Rachel J. Gorwitz,Angela J. Jiles,Heidi Moline,Pedro L. Moro,Chukwuebuka Nsofor,Namrata Prasad,H. Walker,Jacquline Risalvato,Sarah Schillie +45 more
TL;DR: CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommended use of PCV15 as an option for pneumococcal conjugate vaccination of persons aged <19 years according to currently recommended PCV13 dosing and schedules.
References
•Journal Article
Prevention and control of meningococcal disease: recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).
TL;DR: This report summarizes and updates an earlier published statement issued by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices concerning the control and prevention of meningococcal disease and provides updated recommendations regarding the use of menedococcal vaccine.
What is the European Medicines Agency
Irene Bighelli,Corrado Barbui +1 more
TL;DR: The main roles and responsibilities of the EMA and the key rules that govern the approval process are presented, together with some suggestions for dealing with them.
Human immunity to the meningococcus i. the role of humoral antibodies
TL;DR: It was found that the proportion of individuals with serum bactericidal activity to meningococci of serogroups A, B, and C was reciprocally related to the incidence of disease, and susceptible persons are deficient in antimeningococcal antibodies because they have not received significant exposure to mena antigens in the past.
•Journal Article
Surveillance for violent deaths--National Violent Death Reporting System, 16 states, 2005.
TL;DR: For example, the first detailed summary of data concerning violent deaths collected by the CDC's National Violent Death Reporting System (NVDRS) was published in 2005 as mentioned in this paper, showing that the majority (56.1%) of deaths were suicides, followed by homicides and deaths involving legal interventions (29.6%), violent deaths of undetermined intent (13.3%), and unintentional firearm deaths (0.7%).
751
Infectious diseases associated with complement deficiencies.
J E Figueroa,P Densen +1 more
TL;DR: Although complement undoubtedly plays a role in host defense against many microbial pathogens, it appears most important in protection against encapsulated bacteria, especially Neisseria meningitidis but also Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, and, to a lesser extent, NeISSeria gonorrhoeae.
740
Related Papers (5)
Mariagrazia Pizza,Rafik Bekkat-Berkani,Rino Rappuoli +2 more
- 03 Oct 2020
Robert C. Read,David Baxter,David Chadwick,Saul N. Faust,Saul N. Faust,Adam Finn,Stephen B. Gordon,Paul T. Heath,David J. M. Lewis,Andrew J. Pollard,David P. J. Turner,Rohit Bazaz,Amitava Ganguli,Tom Havelock,Tom Havelock,Keith R. Neal,Ifeanyichukwu O Okike,Begonia Morales-Aza,Kamlesh Patel,Matthew D. Snape,John Williams,Stefanie Gilchrist,Steve J. Gray,Martin C. J. Maiden,Daniela Toneatto,Huajun Wang,Maggie McCarthy,Peter M. Dull,Ray Borrow,Ray Borrow +29 more