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Measles-Mumps-Rubella
immunisation, autism and inflammatory bowel disease: update
Janaki Amin and Melanie
Wong,
National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance of Vaccine
Preventable Diseases,
Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children, Westmead, New South Wales
Early last year we reported1
on a study by Wakefield and colleagues which suggested there may be an
association between measles containing vaccine, inflammatory bowel disease
(IBD) and autism.2 The
evidence for either association was very weak1
and the study was conducted on a highly selected group of subjects. Since
then several epidemiological investigations have found no evidence for any
association with autism and/or IBD.5,6,7,8,9
Also, specific virological assays in patients with IBD, the proposed
aetiological link for autism after measles-mumps-rubella (MMR)
vaccination, have not detected measles virus.3,4
Following the publication of the Wakefield study2
however, there has been a measurable decrease in the uptake of MMR in the
United Kingdom (UK).10
In June this year two further
reports were published that provide no support for a causal link between
measles vaccine and autism.11,12
The Working Party on MMR Vaccine of the UK’s Committee on Safety of
Medicine’s study11
evaluated the reports of autism, Crohn’s disease, and similar disorders
developing after MMR or MR vaccination, collected by a firm of solicitors.
A systematic review of these cases lead the Working Party to conclude that
the information available (which was of variable quality, subject to
selection bias and lacked a control group) did not support the suggested
causal association between measles vaccine and autism or Crohn’s
disease.
The second report, by Taylor
et al.,12 is a
population-based study that overcomes many of the limitations of the
Working Party’s study. Taylor’s study investigated 498 children with
autism born since 1979 in the North Thames Region. These children’s
measles vaccination status was determined from an independent register.
The investigators found that:
- there was a steady increase in cases of
autism over time, however there was no ‘step-up’ after the
introduction of MMR in 1988;
- the age of diagnosis of children with
autism was not dependent on when or if a child had been vaccinated;
- vaccination coverage rates in cases did
not differ significantly from that for the region as a whole; and
- developmental regression was not
clustered in the months after vaccination.
These results should alleviate
concerns about the possibility of MMR causing autism or IBD and hopefully
reassure parents and others as to the safety of MMR.
References
1. Amin J, McIntyre PB,
Heath TC. Measles vaccine, inflammatory bowel disease and pervasive
developmental disorder: is there cause for concern? Commun Dis Intell
1998;22: 8-59.
2. Wakefield AJ, Murch
SH, Anthony A et al. Ileal-lymphoid- nodular
hyperplasia, non-specific colitis, and pervasive developmental disorder in
children. Lancet 1998;351:637-41.
3. Afzal MA, Minor PD,
Begley J et al. Absence of measles-virus genome in inflammatory bowel
disease. Lancet 1998;351:646-647.
4. Chadwick N, Bruce IJ,
Schpelmann S, Pounder RE, Wakefield AJ. Measles virus DNA is not detected
in inflammatory bowel disease using hybrid capture and reverse
transcriptase followed by polymerase chain reaction. J Med Virol
1998;55:305-11.
5. Gillberg C,
Steffenburg S, Schaumann H. Is autism more common now than 10 years ago. Br
J Psychiatry 1998;158:403-9.
6. Wing L. Autism
spectrum disorders: no evidence for or against an increase in prevalence. BMJ
1996;312:327-28.
7. Payne C, Mason B.
Autism, inflammatory bowel disease, and MMR vaccine. Lancet
1998;351:907.
8. Fombonne E.
Inflammatory bowel disease and autism. Lancet1998;351:955.
9. Peltola H, Patja A,
Leinikki P Valle M, Davidkin I, Paunio M. No evidence for measles,
mumps, and rubella vaccine-associated inflammatory bowel disease or autism
in a 14-year prospective study. Lancet 1998;351:1327-28.
10. CDSC COVER/Korner: April
to June 1998 Commun Dis Rep CDR Wkly 1998;8:345-46.
11. Medicines Commission
Agency/Committee on Safety of Medicines. The safety of MMR vaccine. Curr
Probl Pharmacovigilance 1999:25:9-10.
12. Taylor B, Miller E,
Farrington CP et al. Autism and measles, mumps and rubella vaccine: no
epidemiological evidence for a casual association. Lancet 1999:353
(9169):2026-29.
The NCIRS was established
by the National Centre for Disease Control, Commonwealth Department of
Health and Aged Care. The Centre analyses, interprets, and evaluates
national surveillance data on immunisation coverage and vaccine
preventable diseases. NCIRS also identifies research priorities, and
initiates and coordinates research on immunisation issues and the
epidemiology of vaccine preventable diseases in Australia
Source:http://www.health.gov.au/pubhlth/cdi/cdi2308/cdi2308e.htm
Communicable
Diseases Intelligence Vol 23 No 8
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