A The Kids Research Institute Australia study has suggested the seasonal flu vaccine for children could also protect them from respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), with the dual benefit easing pressure on hospitals.
RSV is prolific in winter, infecting children’s lungs and potentially leading to hospitalisation for bronchiolitis and pneumonia.
With no licensed RSV vaccine available, the Wesfarmers Centre for Vaccination and Infectious Diseases-funded study, published in the journal Vaccine, investigated the seasonal influenza vaccine’s impact on reducing RSV hospitalisations.
Researchers examined data from 360,994 Western Australian children under the age of seven years and born between 2000 and 2013 to examine any effect.
The study observed flu vaccination coverage was low before 2008, yet 2009 showed a 36 per cent increase in flu vaccinations in babies aged 6–23 months, a year after the state-funded pre-school vaccination program started.
The new program and increase in vaccination uptake in this age group coincided with a drop in RSV cases.
Over five years, the pre-school influenza program resulted in 1,193 fewer RSV hospitalisations with 793 children, or 67 per cent, under two years old.
Lead analyst Dr Huong Le, from the Wesfarmers Centre of Vaccines and Infectious Diseases based at The Kids Research Institute Australia and The University of Western Australia’s Centre for Child Health Research, said the analysis used a new approach to enhance the accuracy of results.
Associate Professor Hannah Moore, an epidemiologist from the Wesfarmers Center of Vaccines and Infectious Diseases and Curtin University’s School of Population Health, said the study suggested a protective effect that warranted further investigation.
“While it is well established that vaccines are effective in treating the diseases they were designed to target, emerging evidence suggests vaccines also have non-specific effects on diseases caused by other pathogens,” Associate Professor Moore said.
The study showed a link between flu vaccine uptake and reduced RSV cases needing hospitalisation for the under-two age group – the most vulnerable group for contracting the flu and RSV.
“With no licensed RSV vaccine available, further research could determine whether the influenza vaccine could work as an interim measure to ward off RSV while the vaccination landscape develops.”
Director of the Wesfarmers Centre of Vaccines and Infectious Diseases, Professor Chris Blyth, based at The Kids Research Institute Australia, Perth Children’s Hospital and UWA’s Medical School, said reduced RSV cases due to increased flu vaccine uptake would relieve significant pressure on the hospital system.
“The extra benefit of the flu vaccine has potential to significantly reduce health care pressures in winters when the flu and RSV are particularly prevalent,” Professor Blyth said.
Increasing flu vaccine uptake for children would not only reduce pressure on the hospital system, but it would also equate to significant health care savings.
“While the flu vaccine is already considered effective against the flu, this study further validates the effectiveness of state-funded influenza programs as a measure to prevent other viruses.”
The Kids Research Institute Australia has been at the forefront of RSV research, with a clinical study showing the effectiveness of a vaccine given to mothers during pregnancy in protecting their babies up to 180 days after birth.
While a vaccine needs to be licensed, antibody treatments to treat RSV are also being developed and are expected to be available soon.
Further investigation into the effectiveness of the flu vaccine against RSV could potentially also help protect babies and children from the respiratory virus.
More information about the Wesfarmers Centre of Vaccines and Infectious Disease research projects is available here.
The journal article Non-specific benefit of seasonal influenza vaccine on respiratory syncytial virus-hospitalisations in children: An instrumental variable approach using population-based data is available here.