Abstract

Observational cohort studies in high-income settings have suggested that vaccination order may affect children’s subsequent risk of a heterologous infection, with live vaccines reducing and inactivated vaccines (given on their own or with a live vaccine), increasing the risk. We used the self-controlled case-series method, which automatically controls for the individual level confounding to which such cohort studies are prone, to test this hypothesis. We compared the relative incidence (RI) of infections post-vaccination in two calendar periods in England; in Period 1 (September 2002–August 2006) live measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccine was given on its own and in Period 2 (September 2006–April 2010) inactivated vaccines (7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7) and sometimes the combined Haemophilus influenzae type b/meningococcal group C vaccine (Hib-MenC)) were given concomitantly with MMR. Admissions for an infection of the upper or lower respiratory tract, gastrointestinal system or other site in children aged 11–23 months were selected from the Hospital Episode Statistics database in England and linked to child health immunisation histories. The analysis included a total of 24,144 infections in 21,067 children in Period 1 and 36,880 in 31,616 children in Period 2. The RI of admission for any infection in Period 1 was 1.00 (95% confidence interval 0.95–1.06) compared with 0.95 (95% confidence interval 0.90–1.00) in Period 2. Comparing the two periods showed no evidence of a difference in the relative incidence estimates with a ratio of RI of 0.94 (95% confidence interval 0.87–1.02), RIs within 90 days of vaccination were 0.94 (0.91–0.97) in Period 1 and 0.94 (0.91–0.97) in Period 2, consistent with a temporary healthy vaccinee effect. In conclusion, we found no evidence to support the hypothesis that there is a reduction in heterologous infections after MMR on its own or an increase after MMR given concomitantly with an inactivated vaccine.

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