CDC
says it is too late to make new flu vaccine for this season
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[December 05, 2014]
By Julie Steenhuysen
(Reuters) - The U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention said on Thursday it is too late to make new flu
vaccines for the current flu season that could better protect against
the predominant flu virus now circulating in the United States.
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On Wednesday, the CDC sent an advisory to doctors noting that one
component of this year's flu vaccine was only partially protective
against the predominant flu virus, known as influenza A (H3N2),
which has mutated since the current flu shots were made.
CDC Director Dr. Thomas Frieden said it takes four months to make a
new flu vaccine even using newer cell-based technologies, too long
to be helpful in the current flu season.
Past seasons dominated by H3N2 strains of flu have been severe, and
the worry is that without a good match in this year's flu shot, many
people could be hospitalized or die from flu this year.
Frieden encouraged people who have not been vaccinated to get a flu
shot because it could still offer partial protection against the
mutated H3N2 virus and good protection from other strains that might
become predominant later this year. CDC testing shows the vaccine
offers good protection from about half of the H3N2 flu strains
circulating, as well as H1N1 and influenza B strains.
CDC is urging people to seek medical help if they become severely
ill with the flu and ask for an antiviral medication, such as
Roche's Tamiflu or GlaxoSmithKline's Relenza.
Some experts question the CDC's methodology for predicting whether
flu shots will work.
"No one really knows what is going on here with the flu strains and
the match using the current methods," said Michael Osterholm, an
infectious disease expert from the University of Minnesota.
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In a 2011 paper, Osterholm found flu shots only protected about 59
percent of the population. "For all we know, this vaccine may work
as well as it does every other year."
Dr. Richard Zimmerman of the University of Pittsburgh Medical
Center, however, said that, while not perfect, the methods offer "a
reasonable proxy" for what will happen.
Zimmerman said a drift in the H3N2 component of the flu shot is
"unwelcome news" for anyone who cares for the elderly, who are most
at risk during flu seasons. He still recommends vaccination: "You do
what you can do to protect yourself."
(Reporting by Michele Gershberg; Editing by Christian Plumb and
Jonathan Oatis)
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