Meningitis shot also
offers some defense against gonorrhea, study finds
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[July 11, 2017] By
Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Researchers studying a
mass vaccination campaign against meningitis have found a surprising
side effect - the shots also offered moderate protection against
gonorrhea, a sexually transmitted infection that is causing global
alarm.
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The findings, published in The Lancet medical journal on Tuesday,
mark the first time an immunization has shown any protection against
gonorrhea and point to new avenues in the search for a gonorrhea
vaccine, scientists said.
"This new research could be game-changing," said Linda Glennie, an
expert at the Meningitis Research Foundation who was not directly
involved in the study.
Gonorrhea has become an increasingly urgent global health problem in
recent years as strains of the bacterial infection have developed
high levels of drug resistance.
The World Health Organization warned last week that some totally
drug-resistance superbug strains of the disease already pose a major
threat.
Yet so far, efforts to develop a gonorrhea vaccine have yielded
disappointing results: Four potential shots have reached the
clinical trial stage, but none has been effective.
In New Zealand, around 1 million people under age 20 received a
meningitis vaccine known as MeNZB during a 2004-2006 immunization
program. This provided a valuable opportunity to test for
cross-protection, the scientists explained.
For their study, the team used data from 11 sexual health clinics
for all people aged 15 to 30 who had been diagnosed with gonorrhea
or chlamydia, or both, and who had also been eligible to be
immunized against meningitis in the 2004-2006 campaign.
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They found that those who had been vaccinated were significantly
less likely to have gonorrhea. And taking into account factors such
as ethnicity, deprivation, geographical area and gender, having the
MeNZB vaccine reduced the incidence of gonorrhea by around 31
percent.
Helen Petousis-Harris, who co-led the study at the University of
Auckland, said the findings "provide experimental evidence and a
proof of principle" that meningitis vaccines might offer moderate
cross-protection against gonorrhea.
"Our findings could inform future vaccine development for both the
meningococcal and gonorrhea vaccines," she said.
Despite the diseases being very different in symptoms and
transmission modes, she added, the bacteria Neisseria gonorrhoeae
and Neisseria meningitidis have an up to 90 percent genetic match,
providing a biologically plausible mechanism.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland, editing by Louise Heavens)
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