Trivalent cold recombinant influenza live vaccine in institutionalized children with bronchial asthma and patients with psychomotor retardation

Abstract
Twenty asthmatic children and 48 patients with severe psychomotor retardation were inoculated intranasally with trivalent cold-adapted recombinant (CR) influenza vaccine containing CR-125 (H1N1), CR-159 (H3N2) and CRB-117 (B). The vaccinees were mostly seropositive. Severe adverse reactions or asthmatic attacks were not observed, but 7 (15%) of 48 vaccinees with severe psychomotor retardation developed mild to moderate fever. Significant antibody responses in hemagglutination-inhibition tests were demonstrated in 33 (49%) vaccinees to CR-125, 20 (29%) to CR-159 and 8 (12%) to CRB-117. Two nosocomial outbreaks of influenza were observed in the subsequent winter. During an outbreak with H3N2 in one ward of severe psychomotor retardation patients, 2 (11%) of 18 vaccinees became infected compared with 10 (48%) of 21 placebo controls in the same ward (P < 0.05). In the other outbreak, with influenza B virus, 2 (14%) of 14 vaccinees and 13 (52%) of 25 controls in the ward for asthmatic children were infected (P < 0.05). The results indicate that trivalent CR vaccine is safe and effective against nosocomial outbreaks of influenza.

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