Kirkpatrick Beth D, Alston W Kemper
University of Vermont College of Medicine, MCHV Campus, 303 Burgess Building, 111 Colchester Avenue, Burlington, VT 05401, USA.
Curr Opin Infect Dis. 2003 Oct;16(5):369-74. doi: 10.1097/00001432-200310000-00001.
International travelers may be at risk from a variety of potentially severe and life-threatening infections. Some of these diseases are preventable, and vaccination remains a cornerstone of travel medicine. Vaccines that are important for international travel are reviewed, in a succinct update based on the most recent literature.
Discussed are vaccines for enteric infections (polio, cholera, hepatitis A, and typhoid), as well as those for hepatitis B, Japanese encephalitis, yellow fever, and meningococcal vaccines. The controversial end to the polio eradication campaign and the recognition of vaccine-derived polioviruses are discussed. New monovalent cholera vaccines, including the live attenuated Peru-15 and CVD 103-HgR and the oral killed whole cell B subunit vaccine are reviewed, as well as a new oral bivalent vaccine that may offer protection against Vibrio cholerae 0139. Advances in typhoid vaccination include promising preclinical and clinical trial results of recombinant ZH9 and CVD 908-htrA vaccines, which, in addition to providing protection against typhoid fever, may be useful vectors for heterologous antigens. A growing recognition of rare adverse reactions to the 17D yellow fever vaccine, especially postvaccinal encephalitis, has led to a reassessment of its risks and benefits. Development of a novel chimeric vaccine may improve the safety and efficacy of the current Japanese encephalitis vaccine. Vaccination for meningococcal disease is characterized by the need for polyvalent, conjugate vaccines as well as a product that affords protection against serotype B.
This travel vaccination review highlights progress in new travel-related vaccine development and updates the reader on issues surrounding licensed products. It will be useful for generalists, infectious disease physicians, and travel medicine specialists.
国际旅行者可能面临各种潜在的严重且危及生命的感染风险。其中一些疾病是可预防的,疫苗接种仍然是旅行医学的基石。本文基于最新文献,对国际旅行中重要的疫苗进行简要更新综述。
讨论了用于肠道感染(脊髓灰质炎、霍乱、甲型肝炎和伤寒)的疫苗,以及乙型肝炎、日本脑炎、黄热病和脑膜炎球菌疫苗。文中讨论了脊髓灰质炎根除运动有争议的结局以及疫苗衍生脊髓灰质炎病毒的发现。综述了新型单价霍乱疫苗,包括减毒活疫苗秘鲁 - 15和CVD 103 - HgR以及口服全细胞B亚单位灭活疫苗,以及一种可能预防霍乱弧菌0139的新型口服二价疫苗。伤寒疫苗接种的进展包括重组ZH9和CVD 908 - htrA疫苗有前景的临床前和临床试验结果,这些疫苗除了能预防伤寒热外,还可能是异源抗原的有用载体。对17D黄热病疫苗罕见不良反应,尤其是接种后脑炎的认识不断增加,促使人们重新评估其风险和益处。一种新型嵌合疫苗的研发可能会提高当前日本脑炎疫苗的安全性和有效性。脑膜炎球菌病疫苗接种的特点是需要多价结合疫苗以及一种能预防B血清型的产品。
本旅行疫苗接种综述突出了与旅行相关的新疫苗研发进展,并向读者介绍了围绕已获许可产品的问题。它对全科医生、传染病医生和旅行医学专家将有所帮助。