News

DTaP Vaccine Now Cleared for All Five Doses


 

The diphtheria, tetanus, and acellular pertussis (DTaP) vaccine manufactured by Sanofi-Pasteur was approved last month for use as the fifth consecutive dose of the vaccine series in children aged 4 through 6 years, following four previous doses of the same vaccine.

The vaccine, marketed as DAPTACEL (Diphtheria and Tetanus Toxoids and Acellular Pertussis Vaccine Adsorbed) by Sanofi-Pasteur, was approved for four consecutive doses in 2002, administered at 2, 4, 6, and 15–20 months of age. The Food and Drug Administration approved the fifth dose based on safety data and booster responses in a study of more than 400 children for the 4- to 6-year-old dose at 22 different sites, according to Sanofi-Pasteur.

From a practical standpoint, this approval allows physicians using DAPTACEL to stock one brand of the vaccine in the refrigerator for use for all five doses, Dr. Robert W. Frenck Jr., professor of pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, said in an interview.

There is no scientific reason to suspect that using different brand vaccines for a vaccine series in a child would be ineffective, but “from a purist standpoint, if you can use the same vaccine for the whole series, you may argue that it may have some benefit,” added Dr. Frenck, a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics' Committee on Infectious Diseases. He was not involved in DAPTACEL studies and had no conflicts to disclose.

Recommended Reading

CDC Addresses Shortage of IG, Rabies Vaccine
MDedge Family Medicine
New Norovirus Strains Virulent Cause of Diarrhea
MDedge Family Medicine
Link Between HPV and Oral Cancers Backed By New Data
MDedge Family Medicine
Abnormal Pap Smear Rates Fall Since HPV Vaccine
MDedge Family Medicine
Two Nucleoside Analogues Shown to Increase Risk of MI
MDedge Family Medicine
Lack of Circumcision, Immunity Linked to HIV Vaccine Failure
MDedge Family Medicine
Early Syphilis Often Missed in HIV-Positive Men
MDedge Family Medicine
MEASLES HITS HOME: Sobering lessons from 2 travel-related outbreaks
MDedge Family Medicine
What’s the most effective treatment for giardiasis?
MDedge Family Medicine
Bilateral axillary pustules
MDedge Family Medicine