counter customizable free hit
New Vaccine Shows Promise for COPD Patients at Risk for Pneumonia
 
 


Home
Up
Avoid Spirometry
Cigarette Smoke Harmful
COPD, Cognitive Problems
COPD Problems
COPD, Swallowing
COPD Vaccine
Love Handles, Lungs
Lung Transplant Advance
Lung Transplant Delay
Ozone Hurts Lungs
Pollution, Elderly Pneumonia
Seeking COPD Cause
Self-Treatment COPD
TB Remains Elusive
Triple Therapy
Ventilator Treatment
Women and COPD

Home
45 Million Uninsured
Abdominal Screenings
ALS Gene Link
ALS Gene Link
Alzheimer's News
Addiction
Allergy Season
Deaf Seniors
ICU Infections
Arthritis,Bones
Blacks & Obesity
Blood Pressure News
Brushing Dentures
Cancer Headlines
Chronic Disease
Chronic Pain, Disease
Craig Screenings
Dental Health
Reliable Ovarian Test
diabetes_news
Diet
Disabilities Examined
Exercise News
Falls, Serum Link
Faith & Health
Fibromyalgia
Flu Season
Foot Care
Foot Care Myths
Get Involved
Hearing
Heart & Stroke News
HIV, AIDS on Rise
Hormone Therapy News
HRT, Incontinence
How's Your Thyroid
Incontinence Sufferers
Hip Replacement Advances
HIV, Aging Population
Incontinence Relief
Kiss, Don't Shake Hands
Lack of Action
Lung Transplants
Kidney News, Information
Less Surgery Sedation
Overactive Bladder
Liver Health News
Marrow Transplants
Medical Causes Falls
Mental Health
Million with Shingles
New Alliance
Obesity Problems
Parkinson's News
Post-Op Delerium
Psoriasis Disease Links
Problems Accumulate
Respiratory Health
Scar-Free Healing
Seeking a Cure
Seniors Health Tips
Seniors, Shingles
Spinal Injuries
Successful Therapy
Surgeon's Age
Surgery Information
Testosterone Test
Thyroid Screening
Vision and Eye Care
vitamin_use.htm
Skin and Seasons
Throat Problems
Thyroid Surgery Danger
Urinary Tract, Falls
Voice Tips
When to Call Doctor
Worst Pain?
Varicose Vein Therapy
Vertigo Treatment
Thyroid Problems
3-D Mapping

 

 

 



Google
 

 

Web TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
 

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left 

New Vaccine Shows Promise for COPD Patients at Risk for Pneumonia

 

 Newswise — A new vaccine against pneumonia may offer better protection from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients than the currently accepted vaccine, according to recent research that will be published in the September 15 issue of the American Journal of the Respiratory and Critical Care Journal, a publication of the American Thoracic Society.

Because pneumonia disproportionately affects patients with COPD and frequently causes exacerbations, the Centers for Disease Control currently recommend that all adults with COPD receive the 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccination (PPSV23).

However, the efficacy of PPSV23 is not well established in the COPD patient population.

“Reasonable effectiveness for this vaccine has been demonstrated in cohort studies in adults with lung disease,” said Mark Dransfield, M.D. of the University of Alabama at Birmingham and lead author of the study.

“[However,] debate remains about its immunogenicity and effectiveness in COPD.”

Dr. Dransfield and colleagues sought to determine the efficacy of a newer type of vaccine, PCV7, a protein conjugate vaccine, which attaches a weak antigen (in this case, the pneumococcal polysaccharide antigen) to a stronger antigen (the diphtheria toxin) in the hope that the stronger antigen with provoke a more forceful defense from the immune system.

“Conjugated vaccines were originally intended for young children who respond poorly to polysaccharide antigens,” said Dr. Dransfield.

“We wanted to see whether they could have a similar effect in the COPD patient population in whom immune responses may also be blunted.”

Results of the randomized open label trial of 120 adults with moderate to severe COPD showed that, while both the PPSV23 vaccine and the PCV7 vaccine were well-tolerated, the PCV7 vaccine produced superior immune responses on several measures of immunogenicity.

Among patients randomized to take the PCV7 vaccine, the fraction exhibiting a twofold increase in serotype-specific IgG antibodies was higher in five of the seven serotypes tested. Blood drawn from patients who had received the PCV7 vaccine was also more effective at killing pneumococci in six of seven serotypes tested one month after vaccination.

“We have shown that PCV7 induces a superior immune response to PPSV23 in COPD at one month post-vaccination,” concluded Dr. Dransfield.

“Both vaccines elicit responses comparable to those previous observed in health elderly patients.”

Older age and prior vaccination with PPSV23 dampened the efficacy of the PCV7 vaccine, however.

A vaccine in development that contains the capsule of 13 pneumococcal serotypes, called PCV13 (compared to PCV7 which has seven) is hoped to expand the coverage of the vaccine.

“We hope that future research will confirm the superior immunogenicity of PCV13 in COPD,” he added.

“We also want to determine the relative duration of the immune response following PPSV23 and conjugate vaccination and to identify the immunologic correlates of protection against both invasive and non-invasive pneumococcal disease.

"We believe our data provide the rationale for further study of the clinical efficacy of protein-conjugate pneumococcal vaccines in the high risk COPD population.”

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

... ..
...
...

 

 

 

 



Home
Up
About Us
America's Seniors WebMall
Aging News
California Report
Caregiving
Community/Workplace
Fitness,Health
Grandparents
Health Care Policy
Hispanic Seniors
Medicare News
Contents/Sitemap
Prescription Drugs
Pharma Suits
Restaurant Reviews
Rural Seniors
Safety & Security
Seniors Commentary
Seniors' Entertainment
Seniors Headlines
Seniors Finances
Seniors' Issues
Seniors Relationships
Seniors Rights
Social Security News
The Virtual Family
Travel News
TSN Radio on Web
Veterans' Tribute
White House Cards
Privacy Policy
Consumer Alert
Pull Plug Heat Costs

 

 

 To Contact Us, Click here
Copyright (C) 1999-2010 TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com