Vaccination against hepatitis A during outbreaks starting in schools: what can we learn from experiences in central Italy?

Journal: Vaccine
Published:
Abstract

Two outbreaks of hepatitis A started almost simultaneously in a maternal school and in a day care centre located at opposite sides of Florence, Italy, at the end of 2002. Both of them originated from immigrant children, and in both cases, hepatitis A was initially not recognised due to aspecific symptoms. While vaccination of contacts started with delay in the first outbreak, the same intervention was organised and performed in 3 days in the other. The outbreak starting in the maternal school caused 30 notified cases, plus 7 cases diagnosed retrospectively. Nine of them were in a secondary school, where vaccination (in accordance with the Italian national guidelines on hepatitis A (HA) vaccination) had been started only after a secondary case occurred. Only three cases occurred overall in the other outbreak starting in the day care centre, where >80% of infants, children and personnel were immunised. Although few asymptomatic infections probably occurred, no source of contagion existed any longer 2 months after immunisation. A rapid vaccination of school and family contacts of hepatitis A cases after the first case (irrespective of school grade) seems to play an important role to shorten outbreak duration.

Authors
Paolo Bonanni, Anita Franzin, Chiara Staderini, Maria Pitta, Giorgio Garofalo, Rossella Cecconi, Maria Santini, Piero Lai, Barbara Innocenti
Relevant Conditions

Hepatitis, Hepatitis A