More than 800,000 Filipino children aged nine or more received
Dengvaxia last year in a government immunization drive against the
mosquito-borne tropical disease that kills about 20,000 people a
year.
The Department of Health (DOH) stopped using Dengvaxia last month
after its maker, Sanofi Pasteur, said the vaccine itself may in some
cases increase the risk of severe dengue in recipients not
previously infected.
One of the two exhumed bodies showed signs of excessive bleeding,
said officials of the Public Attorney's Office (PAO), which provides
free legal assistance to the poor.
PAO forensic expert Erwin Erfe said bleeding was observed on the
scalp of the second body.
"Bleeding is a prominent symptom of dengue," Erfe told Reuters by
telephone.
PAO is also investigating the deaths of five other children who
received Dengvaxia and initial findings reveal a pattern in how they
died, PAO chief Persida Acosta said.
"There was bleeding in the vital organs, the lungs, heart, liver,
kidney, brain," Acosta told Reuters. "These are all compatible with
hemorrhagic shock."
She said the PAO had received numerous requests to exhume bodies
after the government launched its investigation.
The DOH said it would look at the findings. The DOH has also
submitted cases involving the deaths of 14 children who received
Dengvaxia to a review panel of doctors from a state university and a
state-owned hospital.
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While Dengvaxia is the first-ever approved vaccine for dengue,
scientists had recognized it was imperfect and did not protect
equally against the four different types of the virus in clinical
tests.
A new analysis from six years of clinical data showed Dengvaxia
provided persistent protective benefit against dengue fever in those
who had prior infection.
But those not previously infected could suffer more severe symptoms
in the long term, following vaccination upon a subsequent dengue
infection, Sanofi has said.
"Up to this date, there has been no death established to have been
causally linked to the dengue vaccine, not even among the 40,000
people involved in clinical trials conducted across 15 countries,"
Sanofi said in a statement.
(Reporting by Karen Lema; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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