PEDIATRICS Vol. 109 No. 1 January 2002, pp. 124-129
SPECIAL ARTICLE |
Addressing Parents Concerns: Do Multiple Vaccines Overwhelm or Weaken the Infants Immune System?



* Section of Infectious Diseases, Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, and Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Division of Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
|| Division of Allergy, Immunology, and Transplantation, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
¶ Section of Infectious Diseases, Childrens Hospital and Regional Medical Center, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington
# Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Department of Epidemiology, University of Washington School of Public Health and Community Medicine, and Childrens Hospital and Regional Medical Center, Seattle, Washington
** Department of Preventive Medicine, Vanderbilt Medical College, Nashville, Tennessee
| ABSTRACT |
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Recent surveys found that an increasing number of parents are concerned that infants receive too many vaccines. Implicit in this concern is that the infants immune system is inadequately developed to handle vaccines safely or that multiple vaccines may overwhelm the immune system. In this review, we will examine the following: 1) the ontogeny of the active immune response and the ability of neonates and young infants to respond to vaccines; 2) the theoretic capacity of an infants immune system; 3) data that demonstrate that mild or moderate illness does not interfere with an infants ability to generate protective immune responses to vaccines; 4) how infants respond to vaccines given in combination compared with the same vaccines given separately; 5) data showing that vaccinated children are not more likely to develop infections with other pathogens than unvaccinated children; and 6) the fact that infants actually encounter fewer antigens in vaccines today than they did 40 or 100 years ago.
Key Words: multiple vaccines immunity parental concerns
Abbreviations: Ig, immunoglobulins Th, helper T-cell Hib, Haemophilus influenzae type b OPV, oral polio vaccine HIV, human immunodeficiency virus MMR, measles-mumps-rubella DTP, diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis
| INTRODUCTION |
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One hundred years ago, children received 1 vaccine (the smallpox vaccine). Forty years ago, children received 5 vaccines routinely (diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, polio, and smallpox vaccines) and as many as 8 shots by 2 years of age. Today, children receive 11 vaccines routinely and as many as 20 shots by 2 years of age (Table 1). The increased number of vaccines given to children and the increased percentage of children receiving vaccines have resulted in a dramatic decrease in the number of vaccine-preventable diseases. Most young parents today have never seen many of the diseases that vaccines prevent. As a possible consequence of these trends, recent national surveys found that 23% of parents questioned the number of shots recommended for their children,1 and 25% were concerned that vaccines might weaken the immune system.1
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Because most parents receive information and recommendations about vaccines from their doctors,2 and because these recommendations carry substantial weight with parents,3,4 providers must be knowledgeable when addressing parents concerns. This article will provide health care professionals with information about the effect of vaccines on the infants immune system and the capacity of the immune system to respond safely to multiple vaccines.
| A BRIEF SUMMARY OF NEONATAL AND INFANT IMMUNE RESPONSES |
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The Neonatal Immune System
Neonates develop the capacity to respond to foreign antigens before they are born. B and T cells are present by 14 weeks gestation and express an enormous array of antigen-specific receptors.5 Although the fetal immune system has the potential to respond to large numbers of foreign antigens, few foreign antigens are present in utero, and cells of the immune system are, therefore, primarily "naïve" at birth.
Passively Acquired Immunity
The neonate is, in part, protected against disease by maternal immunoglobulins (Ig). Maternal IgG is transported across the placenta before birth and maternal secretory IgA is present in breast milk and colostrum. These passively acquired antibodies provide protection against pathogens to which the mother was immune. However, protection provided by passively transferred antibodies is short-lived. Passively acquired maternal IgG declines during the first few months of life,6 and most infants are not breastfed beyond several months of age.7 More importantly, maternal antibodies offer limited immunologic protection when compared with protection afforded by an infants active immune response.
Active Immunity
Neonates are capable of generating both humoral and cellular immune responses to pathogens at the time of birth.8,9 Active immunity in the newborn includes the full range of B-cell responses including the production of IgM, IgG, and secretory and monomeric IgA, as well as the development of helper T-cell (Th) and cytotoxic T-cell responses.8,9 In addition, neonates can produce specific Th-cell subsets, including Th1-type cells that participate in cell-mediated immune responses and Th2-type cells that are primarily involved in promoting B-cell responses.8,9
The development of active humoral and cellular immune responses in the newborn is necessary to meet the tremendous number of environmental challenges encountered from the moment of birth. When children are born, they emerge from the relatively sterile environment of the uterus into a world teeming with bacteria and other microorganisms. Beginning with the birth process, the newborn is exposed to microbes from the mothers cervix and birth canal, then the surrounding environment. Within a matter of hours, the gastrointestinal tract of the newborn, initially relatively free of microbes, is heavily colonized with bacteria.10 The most common of these colonizing bacteria include facultative anaerobic bacteria, such as Escherichia coli and streptococci, and strict anaerobic bacteria, such as Bacteroides and Clostridium.10 Specific secretory IgA responses directed against these potentially harmful bacteria are produced by the neonates intestinal lymphocytes within the first week of life.11
Functional Differences Between Infant and Adult Immune Responses
Although infants can generate all functional T-cells (ie, Th1, Th2, and cytotoxic T-cells),8,9 infant B-cell responses are deficient when compared with older children and adults. Infants respond well to antigens (such as proteins) that require T-cell help for development. However, until about 2 years of age, the B-cell response to T-cell-independent antigens (such as polysaccharides) is considerably less than that found in adults.12 For this reason, infants are uniquely susceptible to bacteria that are coated with polysaccharides (such as Haemophilus influenzae type b [Hib] and Streptococcus pneumoniae).
| IMMUNE RESPONSE TO VACCINES BY NEONATES |
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The neonate is capable of mounting a protective immune response to vaccines within hours of birth. For example, neonates born to mothers with hepatitis B virus infection mount an excellent protective immune response to hepatitis B vaccine given at birth, even without additional use of hepatitis B virus-specific immunoglobulin.1315 In addition, BCG vaccine given at birth induces circulating T-cells that protect against bacteremia and subsequent development of miliary tuberculosis and tuberculous meningitis.1618
| IMMUNE RESPONSE TO VACCINES BY INFANTS |
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The young infant is fully capable of generating protective humoral and cellular immune responses to multiple vaccines simultaneously. Approximately 90% of infants develop active protective immune responses to the primary series of diphtheria-tetanus-acellular-pertussis, hepatitis B, pneumococcus, Hib, and inactivated polio vaccines given between 2 months and 6 months of age.19
To circumvent the infants inability to mount T-cell-independent B-cell responses, polysaccharide vaccines (Hib and S pneumoniae) are linked to proteins (ie, diphtheria toxoid, diphtheria toxin mutant protein, tetanus toxoid, or meningococcal group B outer-membrane protein) that engage the infants Th-cells. By converting a T-cell-independent immune response to a T-cell-dependent response, conjugate vaccines can be recognized by the infants B-cells. Conjugate vaccines, therefore, induce protective immune responses in infants that are often greater than those found after natural infection.20
| IMMUNE RESPONSE TO VACCINES BY CHILDREN WITH IMMUNODEFICIENCIES |
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Severely immunocompromised children (specifically, those with T-cell defects) who receive live viral vaccines (eg, measles or varicella vaccines)21,22 or live bacterial vaccines (eg, BCG vaccine)23,24 may develop disseminated infections with these attenuated pathogens. However, the only live vaccine that was routinely given in the United States in the first year of life, the oral polio vaccine (OPV), has now been replaced with inactivated polio vaccine. Therefore, children do not receive their first live viral vaccines until about 12 to 15 months of age. Most children with severe T-cell deficiencies (eg, severe combined immunodeficiency syndrome) will have been identified by 6 to 8 months of age.24,25
However, many children with immunodeficiencies respond well to live viral vaccines. Because the risk of severe infection is greater after natural infection with wild-type viruses than immunization with highly attenuated viruses, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices and American Academy of Pediatrics recommend that certain immunocompromised children should receive live viral vaccines. For example, children with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection without severe T-cell deficiencies (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention class N1 or A1 and age-specific percentage of CD4+ lymphocytes greater than 25%) should receive the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR), and varicella vaccines.2628 Immunizations are well-tolerated by this subset of HIV-infected children and confer protective immunity.29,30 Immunization with live viral vaccines has also been demonstrated to be safe and effective in certain children with malignancies and in children following bone marrow transplantation.31,32
| IMMUNE RESPONSE TO VACCINES BY CHILDREN WITH MILD, MODERATE, OR SEVERE ILLNESSES |
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Some parents may be concerned that children with acute illnesses are, in a sense, immunocompromised, and that they are less likely to respond to vaccines or more likely to develop adverse reactions to vaccines than healthy children. Alternatively, parents may believe that children who are ill should not further burden an immune system already committed to fighting an infection. However, vaccine-specific antibody responses and rates of vaccine-associated adverse reactions of children with mild or moderate illnesses are comparable to those of healthy children. For example, the presence of upper respiratory tract infections, otitis media, fever, skin infections, or diarrhea do not affect the level of protective antibodies induced by immunization.3337
Data on the capacity of vaccines to induce protective immune responses in children with severe infections (such as those with bacterial pneumonia or meningitis) are lacking. Although a delay in vaccines is recommended for children with severe illnesses until the symptoms of illness resolve, this recommendation is not based on the likelihood that the child will have an inadequate immune response to the vaccine. Rather, the reason for deferring immunization is to avoid superimposing a reaction to the vaccine on the underlying illness or to mistakenly attribute a manifestation of the underlying illness to the vaccine.26
| DO VACCINES "OVERWHELM" THE IMMUNE SYSTEM? |
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Infants Have the Capacity to Respond to an Enormous Number of Antigens
Studies on the diversity of antigen receptors indicate that the immune system has the capacity to respond to extremely large numbers of antigens. Current data suggest that the theoretical capacity determined by diversity of antibody variable gene regions would allow for as many as 109 to 1011 different antibody specificities.38 But this prediction is limited by the number of circulating B cells and the likely redundancy of antibodies generated by an individual.
A more practical way to determine the diversity of the immune response would be to estimate the number of vaccines to which a child could respond at one time. If we assume that 1) approximately 10 ng/mL of antibody is likely to be an effective concentration of antibody per epitope (an immunologically distinct region of a protein or polysaccharide),39 2) generation of 10 ng/mL requires approximately 103 B-cells per mL,39 3) a single B-cell clone takes about 1 week to reach the 103 progeny B-cells required to secrete 10 ng/mL of antibody39 (therefore, vaccine-epitope-specific immune responses found about 1 week after immunization can be generated initially from a single B-cell clone per mL), 4) each vaccine contains approximately 100 antigens and 10 epitopes per antigen (ie, 103 epitopes), and 5) approximately 107 B cells are present per mL of circulating blood,39 then each infant would have the theoretical capacity to respond to about 10 000 vaccines at any one time (obtained by dividing 107 B cells per mL by 103 epitopes per vaccine).
Of course, most vaccines contain far fewer than 100 antigens (for example, the hepatitis B, diphtheria, and tetanus vaccines each contain 1 antigen), so the estimated number of vaccines to which a child could respond is conservative. But using this estimate, we would predict that if 11 vaccines were given to infants at one time, then about 0.1% of the immune system would be "used up."
However, because naive B- and T-cells are constantly replenished, a vaccine never really "uses up" a fraction of the immune system. For example, studies of T-cell population dynamics in HIV-infected patients indicate that the human T-cell compartment is highly productive. Specifically, the immune system has the ability to replenish about 2 billion CD4+ T lymphocytes each day. Although this replacement activity is most likely much higher than needed for the normal (and as yet unknown) CD4+ T-cell turnover rate, it illustrates the enormous capacity of the immune system to generate lymphocytes as needed.
Children are Exposed to Fewer Antigens in Vaccines Today Than in the Past
Parents who are worried about the increasing number of recommended vaccines may take comfort in knowing that children are exposed to fewer antigens (proteins and polysaccharides) in vaccines today than in the past.
Table 2 summarizes the number of proteins and polysaccharides contained in routinely recommended vaccines administered over the past 100 years. Although we now give children more vaccines, the actual number of antigens they receive has declined. Whereas previously 1 vaccine, smallpox, contained about 200 proteins, now the 11 routinely recommended vaccines contain fewer than 130 proteins in total. Two factors account for this decline: first, the worldwide eradication of smallpox obviated the need for that vaccine, and second, advances in protein chemistry have resulted in vaccines containing fewer antigens (eg, replacement of whole-cell with acellular pertussis vaccine).
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Children Respond to Multiple Vaccines Given at the Same Time in a Manner Similar to Individual Vaccines
If vaccines overwhelmed or weakened the immune system, then one would expect lesser immune responses when vaccines are given at the same time as compared with when they are given at different times.41,42 However, the following vaccines induce similar humoral immune responses when given at the same or different times: 1) MMR and varicella,43,44 2) MMR, diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP), and OPV,45 3) hepatitis B, diphtheria-tetanus, and OPV,46 4) influenza and pneumococcus,47 5) MMR, DTP-Hib, and varicella,48 6) MMR and Hib,49 and 7) DTP and Hib.49
Achieving similar immune responses by giving vaccines at the same time at different sites may be more easily accomplished than by combining vaccines in the same syringe. Challenges to giving many vaccines in a single injection are based partly on incompatibilities of agents used to buffer or stabilize individual vaccines.50
| DO VACCINES "WEAKEN" THE IMMUNE SYSTEM? |
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Do Vaccines Increase the Risk of Other Infections?
Vaccines may cause temporary suppression of delayed-type hypersensitivity skin reactions or alter certain lymphocyte function tests in vitro.5157 However, the short-lived immunosuppression caused by certain vaccines does not result in an increased risk of infections with other pathogens soon after vaccination. Vaccinated children are not at greater risk of subsequent infections with other pathogens than unvaccinated children.5860 On the contrary, in Germany, a study of 496 vaccinated and unvaccinated children found that children who received immunizations against diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, Hib, and polio within the first 3 months of life had fewer infections with vaccine-related and -unrelated pathogens than the nonvaccinated group.61
Bacterial and viral infections, on the other hand, often predispose children and adults to severe, invasive infections with other pathogens. For example, patients with pneumococcal pneumonia are more likely to have had a recent influenza infection than matched controls. Similarly, varicella infection increases susceptibility to group A ß-hemolytic streptococcal infections such as necrotizing fasciitis, toxic shock syndrome, and bacteremia.63
| SUMMARY |
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Current studies do not support the hypothesis that multiple vaccines overwhelm, weaken, or "use up" the immune system. On the contrary, young infants have an enormous capacity to respond to multiple vaccines, as well as to the many other challenges present in the environment. By providing protection against a number of bacterial and viral pathogens, vaccines prevent the "weakening" of the immune system and consequent secondary bacterial infections occasionally caused by natural infection.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Received for publication Aug 7, 2001; Accepted Oct 4, 2001.
Reprint requests to (P.A.O.) Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, Abramson Research Building, Room 1202C, 3516 Civic Center Blvd, Philadelphia, PA 19104. E-mail: offit{at}email.chop.edu
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PEDIATRICS (ISSN 1098-4275). ©2002 by the American Academy of Pediatrics
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K. M. Posfay-Barbe, U. Heininger, C. Aebi, D. Desgrandchamps, B. Vaudaux, and C.-A. Siegrist How Do Physicians Immunize Their Own Children? Differences Among Pediatricians and Nonpediatricians Pediatrics, November 1, 2005; 116(5): e623 - e633. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. E. Baley and E. G. Leonard The Immunologic Basis for Neonatal Immunizations NeoReviews, October 1, 2005; 6(10): e463 - e470. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. A. Salmon, L. H. Moulton, S. B. Omer, M. P. deHart, S. Stokley, and N. A. Halsey Factors Associated With Refusal of Childhood Vaccines Among Parents of School-aged Children: A Case-Control Study Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med, May 1, 2005; 159(5): 470 - 476. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. Colgrove and R. Bayer Could It Happen Here? Vaccine Risk Controversies And The Specter Of Derailment Health Aff., May 1, 2005; 24(3): 729 - 739. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. McGreevy Risks and benefits of the single versus the triple MMR vaccine: how can health professionals reassure parents? Perspectives in Public Health, March 1, 2005; 125(2): 84 - 86. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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S. G. Humiston, P. G. Szilagyi, M. K. Iwane, S. J. Schaffer, J. Santoli, L. Shone, R. Barth, T. McInerny, and B. Schwartz The Feasibility of Universal Influenza Vaccination for Infants and Toddlers Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med, September 1, 2004; 158(9): 867 - 874. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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H. Bedford and D. Elliman Misconceptions about the new combination vaccine BMJ, August 21, 2004; 329(7463): 411 - 412. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Fitzpatrick MMR: risk, choice, chance Br. Med. Bull., June 1, 2004; 69(1): 143 - 153. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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D. A. Salmon, L. H. Moulton, S. B. Omer, L. M. Chace, A. Klassen, P. Talebian, and N. A. Halsey Knowledge, Attitudes, and Beliefs of School Nurses and Personnel and Associations With Nonmedical Immunization Exemptions Pediatrics, June 1, 2004; 113(6): e552 - e559. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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A. Meyerhoff, R. J. Jacobs, D. P. Greenberg, B. Yagoda, and C. G. Castles Clinician Satisfaction with Vaccination Visits and the Role of Multiple Injections, Results from the Covise Study (Combination Vaccines Impact on Satisfaction and Epidemiology) Clinical Pediatrics, January 1, 2004; 43(1): 87 - 93. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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D. Elliman and H. Bedford Safety and efficacy of combination vaccines BMJ, May 10, 2003; 326(7397): 995 - 996. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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W. Havinga, P. A. Offit, M. A. Gerber, C. Hackett, E. Marcuse, and B. Gellin Too Many Vaccinations? Pediatrics, September 1, 2002; 110(3): 648 - 649. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. Kemp AAP News, March 1, 2002; 20(3): 100 - 100. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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