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| Vaccine description | |
|---|---|
| Target disease | group B meningococcus strain |
| Type | Subunit |
| Clinical data | |
| Pregnancy cat. | ? |
| Legal status | Prescription Only Medicine |
| Routes | Injected |
| Identifiers | |
| ATC code | J07AH06 |
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MeNZB was a vaccine against a specific strain of group B meningococcus,[1] used to control an epidemic of meningococcal disease in New Zealand. Most people are able to carry the meningococcus bacteria safely with no ill effects. However, meningococcal disease can cause meningitis and septicaemia, resulting in brain damage, failure of various organs, severe skin and soft-tissue damage, and death.
Immunisation with MeNZB requires three doses, administered approximately six weeks apart (except in newborns, who have them in conjunction with their 6-week, 3-month and 5-month injections). People who have been fully immunised may still carry the meningococcus bacteria and may still contract meningococcal disease.
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Contents
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Each dose is 0.5 ml and contains:
The antigen in MeNZB is prepared from B:4:P1.7b,4 (NZ 98/254 ) N. meningitidis strain, grown in a fermentor. The bacteria are grown in a synthetic culture medium containing sugar, essential amino acids and essential elements such as iron and potassium. The fermentation does not use bovine or porcine products. The cellular outer membranes are extracted with the detergent deoxycholate, which kills the bacteria. Outer membrane vesicles are purified out of the culture medium by ultracentrifugation, stabilised by histidine and then adsorbed to aluminium hydroxide Al(OH)3 as an adjuvant. Purification is achieved by ultrafiltration/diafiltration.
Since its introduction the vaccine has had a dramatic impact on the epidemic.[2] In April 2008 it was unexpectedly[by whom?] announced by the New Zealand Ministry of Health that the MeNZB vaccination programme will be completed by 31 December 2008, and that after this period vaccination would require authorization of a GP. Reasons given for this halt of the programme include that the epidemic was coming to an end, and that immune protection given by the vaccine is only short-term.[3] Others[who?] speculate that the cost of providing the vaccine is too high for the NZ government to justify[citation needed].
The vaccine, originally developed in Norway and subject to considerable public controversy as recently as October 2007[citation needed], was never released for widespread use in that country because the Norwegian epidemic was finishing before it was released.
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