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Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages 253-256 (July 2009)


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Influenza and meningococcal disease: Lessons for travellers and government from 2 epidemic diseases

Robert BooyabCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Haitham El Bashirc, Harunor Rashidb, Delane Shingadiad, Elizabeth Haworthe

Received 24 August 2008; accepted 8 September 2008. published online 14 November 2008.

Summary 

Influenza and meningococcal disease are two serious diseases that are especially linked. Outbreaks of influenza have been frequently associated with secondary outbreaks of meningococcal disease. Travellers such as Hajj pilgrims are at particular risk, the most recent meningococcal outbreaks being in 2000 and 2001, while concern is rising that the annual pilgrimage, centred as it presently is on winter, may even become the epicentre of an avian influenza pandemic. Routine vaccination of pilgrims against meningococcal disease using a 4-valent product has been in place since 2002 with good effect, but influenza vaccine is not yet routinely required for all pilgrims despite the high proportion afflicted.

Meningococcal polysaccharide vaccines are effective in older children and adults and this cheaper product can play a role in the short term management of meningococcal outbreaks due to serogroups A, C, W135 or Y. The impressively fast development of a C conjugate vaccine in the late 1990s was a credit to the close collaboration of pharma, academia and the executive. A similar alignment could accelerate the production of an efficacious and cost-effective H5N1 influenza vaccine through direct transparent competition with head-to-head randomised, double-blinded controlled trials.

Both organisms have a propensity to mutate and adapt to immune pressure. There are lessons to be learnt from how we manage each for the control of the other.

a The Children's Hospital at Westmead and The University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

b Academic Unit of Child Health, Barts and The London Queen Mary's School of Medicine and Dentistry, UK

c General and Adolescent Paediatric Unit, Institute of Child Health, University College London, UK

d Department of Infectious Diseases, Great Ormond Street Hospital, Great Ormond Street, London, UK

e Health Protection Agency South East, UK

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance of Vaccine Preventable Disease, The Children's Hospital at Westmead and The University of Sydney, New South Wales, Locked Bag 4001, Westmead NSW 2145, Australia. Tel.: +61 (0)298451415; fax: +61 (0)298451418.

PII: S1477-8939(08)00123-3

doi:10.1016/j.tmaid.2008.09.001


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