Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3368720 | Journal of Clinical Virology | 2016 | 6 Pages |
•Varicella infection during chemotherapy in pediatric oncology patients still causes morbidity.•We report that varicella vaccination during chemotherapy in pediatric oncology patients is feasible.•Seroconversion after 2 vaccinations in this pediatric oncology cohort was 70%.•VZV-specific CD4+ T cells were induced upon vaccination, after 2 vaccinations in all analyzed patients.•Safety on when and under what circumstances to vaccinate remains important.
BackgroundMorbidity and mortality from primary varicella-zoster virus (VZV) infection is increased in immunocompromised children. Vaccination of VZV-seronegative cancer patients with live-attenuated varicella vaccine is safe when chemotherapy is interrupted. However, VZV vaccination without interruption of chemotherapy would be preferable.ObjectiveTo vaccinate VZV-seronegative pediatric oncology patients with live-attenuated VZV vaccine without interrupting their chemotherapy.Study-designWe performed a single-center prospective cohort study.ResultsThirty-one patients with either a hematological malignancy (n = 24) or a solid tumor (n = 7) were vaccinated early during their course of chemotherapy. VZV IgG seroconversion occurred in 14 of the 31 patients (45%) after one vaccination. Only 20 patients were revaccinated after 3 months. These were patients who did not seroconvert (5 patients) and patients who serocoverted (15 patients) to induce or sustain seropositivity. Of these 20 patients the final seroconversion rate was 70%. Seven out of the 31 patients (23%) developed a mild rash of which 5 were treated with antivirals and recovered completely without interrupting chemotherapy, and 2 recovered untreated. Of these 31 immunized patients 26 were available for cellular testing. After one vaccination 20 of 26 patients (77%) tested positive for VZV-specific CD4+ T cells, of which 7 patients had remained VZV-seronegative. After the second vaccination 11 of 11 patients showed VZV-specific CD4+ T cells to sustain positivity, although 4 remained VZV-seronegative.ConclusionsThis study indicates that live-attenuated VZV vaccine can be safely administered to closely monitored pediatric oncology patients without interruption of chemotherapy and adaptive immunity was induced despite incomplete seroconversion.