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What
Parents Should Know About Measles-Mumps-Rubella (MMR) Vaccine and Autism
Q. Is there a link
between measles vaccination and autism?
- No, there is no
scientifically proven link between measles vaccination and autism.
- Extensive reports
from both the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Institute of Medicine
and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention conclude that there
is no proven association between Measles-Mumps-Rubella (MMR) vaccine
and autism.
- Autism is a chronic
developmental disorder, often first identified in toddlers from age
18 months to 30 months. MMR is administered just before the peak age
of onset of autism. This timing leads some parents to mistakenly assume
a causal relationship. There is no evidence that MMR causes autism.
- Increasing evidence
indicates that autism is determined while the baby is still in the womb,
early in the pregnancy.
Q. What is autism?
- Autism is a spectrum
of chronic developmental disorders.
- The main characteristics
of autism are difficulties in social interaction, communication, and
restrictive and repetitive interests and activities.
- Autism may be noted
initially in infancy as impaired attachment, but autism is most often
first identified in toddlers, mostly boys, from 18 to 30 months of age.
- Although there
is no cure, autism is treatable. Symptoms associated with autism often
improve as children start to acquire language and learn how to communicate
their needs.
Q. What about Dr.
Andrew Wakefields research claiming a link between MMR and autism?
- Dr Wakefield's
1998 paper is simply a description of 12 children who were referred
to his clinic because of diarrhea or abdominal pain. The 12 children
also had a history of normal development followed by loss of certain
skills. When a history was taken, questions were asked about MMR immunizations
that had been administered as many as 9 years earlier and the relationship
of these vaccines to onset of loss of skills. From these data, involving
a small sample of children, Wakefield proposed an association between
immunization and autism. Any association with MMR was based on parental
recall about events that occurred many years earlier, instead of objective
data. Further, in four of the 12 cases, the behavioral disorders predated
the bowel symptoms, which refutes Wakefields own theory that bowel
dysfunction (caused by MMR) causes autism. There was clearly selection
bias as the children already had gastrointestinal symptoms. And there
was no control group, a critical omission that casts further doubt on
the findings. This was not a scientific paper but rather a description
of parental recall from a skewed population of children referred to
Wakefields clinic.
- Replication of
findings is a standard of good science. If research findings can be
reproduced in a separate setting, it affirms those findings. Dr. Wakefields
original research showed measles virus in Crohn's patients. He shared
these specimens with his colleagues at Royal Free Hospital in London,
who were then unable to find the measles virus using even more sensitive
methods. Many other scientists examined intestinal biopsies of Crohn's
patients and could not find measles virus. Wakefield's findings could
not be replicated.
- Dr. Wakefields
2002 paper in the Journal of Molecular Pathology is also critically
flawed. It claimed that 75 of 91 children with autism were found to
have measles virus genome in intestinal biopsy tissue as compared with
only 5 of 70 control patients. But we know that after the vaccine is
given, the virus is likely to be taken up by specific immune cells and
carried throughout the body (including the intestine).). To determine
if MMR is associated with autism, one must determine if the finding
is specific for children with autism. Put differently, the control group
must match the group of autistic children for immunization status and
for the length of time between their MMR vaccine and their biopsy. This
critical information was omitted from the paper.
- A study by respected
researchers, published this year in the British Medical Journal, found
no rise in incidence of autism in children who received MMR as compared
to those who did not. The authors also showed that in autistic children,
the age at which a child received MMR did not affect the age at which
the diagnosis of autism was made. They also demonstrated that in the
years after the MMR vaccine was introduced in the United Kingdom, there
was no increase in autism rates in comparison to the years before the
vaccine was available.
Q. Why are we seeing
a rise in the incidence of autism?
- Physicians use
a book called the Diagnostic Statistical Manual to help them diagnose
cases of autism. In the past decade, the guidelines in that book have
changed. They have become more inclusive. So children who used to be
considered "learning delayed" or to have "behavior problems"
may now be more correctly diagnosed with mild autism.
- Parents and medical
professionals are simply more aware of the condition and are more likely
to pursue a diagnosis and treatment than in years past. As there are
more state and federally funded programs available for children with
autism, there is an increased incentive to make a diagnosis, so those
children will have access to those programs.
- A recent study
in the British Medical Journal found no rise in incidence of autism
in children who received MMR as compared to those who did not. The authors
also showed that in autistic children (both ASD and classical) the age
at which a child received MMR did not affect the age at which the diagnosis
of autism was made.
Q. Why not separate
the measles, mumps and rubella vaccines and immunize for each illness
individually?
- A panel of experts
convened in June, 2000, by the Academy concluded in its report that
"separate administration of measles, mumps and rubella vaccines
to children provides no benefit over administration of the combination
MMR vaccine and would result in delayed or missed immunizations."
- The separate vaccines
are not an option because they are not currently being manufactured
in this country.
- There is no scientific
reason for or benefit to separating the vaccines. By separating them,
we are putting children (and pregnant women who may be exposed to them)
at increased risk by extending the amount of time they go unvaccinated.
Q. What does all
this mean to pediatricians and parents?
- This means that
pediatricians can and should feel confident using MMR vaccine and recommending
it for their patients, and parents can feel confident about it as well.
Q. Why should we
still vaccinate against measles when cases are so uncommon?
- Measles virus is
common throughout the world and is frequently imported into the U.S.
In 1996, 47 cases were known to have been imported by people traveling
to the U.S. from other countries. In 1998 and 1999 all U.S. measles
cases reported were linked to imported cases.
- Before measles
immunizations were available, nearly everyone in the U.S. got measles.
There were approximately 3 to 4 million measles cases each year. An
average of 450 measles-associated deaths were reported each year between
1953 and 1963.
- If we stop vaccinating,
we would see more people die from measles. During the 1998 - 1999 measles
outbreak in the U.S., one out of every 500 people who contracted measles
died.
Q. What are the
complications of measles vaccination?
- Measles vaccine
is safe; most people have no reactions.
- About 5 percent
to 15 percent of vaccine recipients may develop a fever five to 12 days
after MMR vaccination. The fever usually lasts one to two days and usually
is not associated with other symptoms. About 5 percent of MMR recipients
may develop a rash one to two weeks after immunization.
- Central nervous
system disturbances, such as encephalitis, have been reported with a
frequency of less than one per 1 million doses of MMR vaccination administered,
a frequency many times lower than the incidence of serious central nervous
system disorders that follow natural infection at a rate of one per
800.
Q. Arent
measles, mumps and rubella relatively harmless illnesses?
Measles
- Highly contagious
respiratory disease
- Causes rash, high
fever, cough, runny nose and red, watery eyes, lasting about a week
- Causes ear infections
and pneumonia in 1 out of every 12 children who get it
- Causes encephalitis
that can lead to convulsions, deafness or mental retardation in 1 to
2 of every 2,000 people who get it
- In 1989-90, there
was a measles epidemic, resulting in 55,000 cases of measles, 11,000
hospitalizations, and 123 deaths. The majority of these cases were in
unimmunized preschool children
- Of every 1,000
people who get measles, 1 to 2 will die
- Measles vaccine
(contained in MMR, MR and measles vaccines) can prevent this disease
Mumps
- Causes fever, headache
and swelling of one or both cheeks or sides of the jaw
- Four to six persons
out of 100 who get mumps will get meningitis
- Inflammation of
the testicles occurs in about 4 of every 10 adult males who get mumps,
which may lead to sterility
- May result in hearing
loss, which is usually permanent
Rubella
- Also known as German
measles
- Mild disease in
children and young adults, causing rash and fever for 2 to 3 days
- Causes devastating
birth defects if contracted by a pregnant woman; there is at least 80%
chance of damage to the fetus if a woman is infected early in pregnancy
Q. What causes
autism?
The causes of autism
are not known for certain. Most experts agree that autism is a condition
that begins before birth. The current theory favored by many experts is
that autism is a genetically based disorder. Studies of people with autism
have identified abnormalities in brain structures that develop in the
first few weeks of gestation (that is, while the fetus is in the womb).
Q. What is being
done to make sure that vaccines stay safe?
The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health and the Food
and Drug Administration continue to conduct studies to further ensure
the safety of vaccines.
For more information
about immunizations, access the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines
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