Infection is a serious concern in the short and long term after pediatric liver transplantation. Vaccination represents an easy and cheap opportunity to reduce morbidity and mortality due to vaccine-preventable infection. This retrospective, observational, multi-center study examines the immunization status in pediatric liver transplant candidates at the time of transplantation and compares it to a control group of children with acute liver disease. Findings show only 80% were vaccinated age-appropriately, defined as having received the recommended number of vaccination doses for their age prior to transplantation; for DTP-PV-Hib, less than 75% for Hepatitis B and two-thirds for pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in children with chronic liver disease. Vaccination coverage for live vaccines is better compared to the acute control group with 81% versus 62% for measles, mumps and rubella (p = 0.003) and 65% versus 55% for varicella (p = 0.171). Nevertheless, a country-specific comparison with national reference data suggests a lower vaccination coverage in children with chronic liver disease. Our study reveals an under-vaccination in this high-risk group prior to transplantation and underlines the need to improve vaccination.

Laue, T., Demir, Z., Debray, D., Cananzi, M., Gaio, P., Casotti, V., et al. (2021). Under-vaccination in pediatric liver transplant candidates with acute and chronic liver disease-a retrospective observational study of the European reference network transplantchild. CHILDREN, 8(8) [10.3390/children8080675].

Under-vaccination in pediatric liver transplant candidates with acute and chronic liver disease-a retrospective observational study of the European reference network transplantchild

D'Antiga L.;
2021

Abstract

Infection is a serious concern in the short and long term after pediatric liver transplantation. Vaccination represents an easy and cheap opportunity to reduce morbidity and mortality due to vaccine-preventable infection. This retrospective, observational, multi-center study examines the immunization status in pediatric liver transplant candidates at the time of transplantation and compares it to a control group of children with acute liver disease. Findings show only 80% were vaccinated age-appropriately, defined as having received the recommended number of vaccination doses for their age prior to transplantation; for DTP-PV-Hib, less than 75% for Hepatitis B and two-thirds for pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in children with chronic liver disease. Vaccination coverage for live vaccines is better compared to the acute control group with 81% versus 62% for measles, mumps and rubella (p = 0.003) and 65% versus 55% for varicella (p = 0.171). Nevertheless, a country-specific comparison with national reference data suggests a lower vaccination coverage in children with chronic liver disease. Our study reveals an under-vaccination in this high-risk group prior to transplantation and underlines the need to improve vaccination.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Immunization; Pediatric liver transplantation; TransplantChild; Vaccination;
English
2021
8
8
675
none
Laue, T., Demir, Z., Debray, D., Cananzi, M., Gaio, P., Casotti, V., et al. (2021). Under-vaccination in pediatric liver transplant candidates with acute and chronic liver disease-a retrospective observational study of the European reference network transplantchild. CHILDREN, 8(8) [10.3390/children8080675].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/473869
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