There are two quite different types of meningococcal vaccines. The multivalent polysaccharide vaccine (containing polysaccharides from serogroups A, C, W135,Y) has been available for many years. It is frequently used in adults and older children travelling to endemic areas of Africa and Asia. The new conjugated serogroup C vaccine is effective in young children.
There is no vaccine for serogroup B. A prototype vaccine especially developed for the subtype (B:4:P1.7b,4)prevalent in New Zealand is currently being studied in Auckland.5
Meningococcal tetravalent polysaccharide vaccine
There are two products available (Mencevax ACWY - containing phenol 0.25%as a preservative, and Menomune - containing thiomersal 0.01% as a preservative).Each protects against serogroups A, C, W135 and Y. These vaccines are provided in a monodose vial with 0.5 mL saline diluent.2 They do not contain infectious material.
These tetravalent polysaccharide vaccines can be used for travellers and in outbreak control although the conjugated vaccine would be preferred for control of serogroup C outbreaks. Polysaccharide vaccines are not suitable for mass vaccination programs because:
– children under the age of 10 years have a diminished immunologic response and the vaccines are not approved for use in children under the age of two years
– immunity persists for only 3-5 years depending on the age of the recipient
– hyporesponsiveness occurs following subsequent doses
– effectiveness against serogroup C disease varies according to age and length of follow-up (one study showed 65% effectiveness for two years in people aged six months-20 years).
Adverse events such as injection site reactions and fever, which occur in2% of children, are usually mild. Contraindications are hypersensitivity to any of the vaccine components or anaphylactic reaction following a previous dose.2
Meningococcal serogroup C conjugate vaccine
There are three products available:
– Meningitec - the 0.5 mL dose contains group C oligosaccharide conjugated to 15 microgram of non-toxic Corynebacteriumdiphtheriae CRM197 protein + aluminium phosphate adjuvant
– Menjugate - the 0.5 mL dose contains group C polysaccharide conjugated to 12.5-25 microgram of a non-toxic Corynebacteriumdiphtheriae CRM197 protein + aluminium hydroxide adjuvant
– NeisVac-C - the 0.5 mL dose contains group C polysaccharide conjugated to 10-20 microgram of tetanus toxoid + aluminium hydroxide adjuvant.
These vaccines contain no infectious material and have some important features:
– they can be given to all age groups including infants from the age of six weeks
– only a single dose is required for people over one year old (babies under the age of four months require three doses at least one month apart; those aged over four months but less than 12 months old require two doses*)
– the effectiveness is about 90% in the short term6,7
– they may have a long duration of protection - possibly 15 or more years.
Adverse event rates vary with the age of the child. Children under the age of two years can develop local redness (2%), irritability (20-50%) and fever more than 380C (2-5%). Older children more frequently develop local redness (30%) and headaches (10-14%), but have a slightly lower rate of fever (1-2%).3,6
The vaccines are contraindicated in people with a hypersensitivity to any of the components or an anaphylactic reaction to a previous dose. They are not recommended in pregnancy (Category 2B) due to lack of data.
The vaccines may be administered simultaneously with other vaccines in the Australian Standard Vaccination Schedule. They should not be mixed in the same syringe with other vaccines.