A Group Health study in the August 2 issue of The Lancet
adds fuel to the growing controversy over how well the flu vaccine protects the
elderly.
The study of more than 3,500 Group Health patients age 65found no link between flu
vaccination and risk of pneumonia during three flu seasons. "This suggests
that the flu vaccine doesn't protect seniors as much as has been thought,"
said Michael L. Jackson, PhD, MPH, a postdoctoral fellow at the Group Health
Center for Health Studies.
"Ours is by far the largest case-control study of flu
vaccine in the elderly," Jackson added. This kind of study compares
"cases" with "controls." The cases were patients with
"community-acquired" pneumonia treated in a hospital or elsewhere.
The controls were people matched to cases by sex and age, but with no
pneumonia. Both groups were found to have similar rates of flu vaccination. All
had intact immune systems and none lived in a nursing home.
Jackson and his colleagues carefully reviewed medical
records to reveal details of seniors' health and ability to do daily
activities. "We tried to overcome the limits of previous studies done by
others," he explained. "Those studies may have overestimated the
benefits of the flu vaccine in the elderly for various reasons." For
instance, those studies looked only at pneumonia cases treated in a hospital.
They also included seniors who had immune problems, which limit potential benefit
from vaccination. And they didn't review medical records to get information on
chronic diseases, such as heart or lung disease, which raise the risk of
pneumonia.
Most importantly, those previous studies also failed to
account for differences between healthier seniors and those who were
"frail," Jackson said. Frail seniors are older and have chronic
diseases and difficulty walking. "They are less likely than younger,
healthier seniors to go out and get vaccinatedand more apt to develop
pneumonia," he said.
Pneumonia is a common and potentially life-threatening
complication of the flu, Jackson said. But pneumonia can happen without the
flu. "That's why our study used a control time period, after flu vaccine
became available but before each flu season actually started," he said.
During those pre-flu-season periods, people who had been vaccinated were much
less likely to get pneumonia. Why? "Because those who got the vaccine
happened to be healthiernot because the flu vaccine was protecting them from
pneumonia caused by the flu, since it wasn't present yet," he explained.
"Despite our findings, and even though immune responses
are known to decline with age, I still want my grandmother to keep getting the
flu vaccine," said Jackson. "The flu vaccine is safe. So it seems
worth getting, even if it might lower the risk of pneumonia and death only
slightly."
His co-author Lisa A. Jackson, MD, MPH (no relation), a
senior investigator at the Group Health Center for Health Studies, agreed.
"People age 65 and older should still get yearly flu vaccines as
usual," she advised. But she said that researchers should work to
understand better how well the current flu vaccines work in seniorsand to
explore other options for controlling flu in the "old old." Examples
include bigger doses or stronger types of vaccines, and conducting randomized
controlled trials comparing them.
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