
Volume 11 • Issue 1 • Winter
2007Vaccine for adult
shingles now available
The Food and Drug Administration in May
2006 announced the approval of Zostavax, the first vaccine for adult
shingles.
The agency cleared the vaccine for use in adults age 60 and older. Studies
showed it prevents shingles in about 51 percent of the population.
The
vaccine, manufactured by Merck & Co. and slated for coverage under the
Medicare Part D prescription program, is given in one dose and costs
approximately $275, says Maria Dela Rosa, M.D., who practices at St.
John’s Senior Health Center, which offers Zostavax.
 |
| Dr. Maria DelaRosa |
“We
highly recommend the vaccine because shingles is so common in the older
adult population, and because it can be very painful and debilitating,”
says Dr. Dela Rosa. “For those who get vaccinated but still get shingles,
their outbreaks are usually less severe and with fewer long-lasting
effects, such as nerve pain.”
There are approximately 50 million Americans over age 60. More than 95
percent had chickenpox as children, making them vulnerable to shingles.
The illness causes a rash with painful blisters that usually lasts two to
four weeks.
Shingles is treated with antiviral drugs and prescription pain medication
during and shortly after the outbreak, but symptoms can persist long after
the blisters have gone away, Dr. Dela Rosa says.
After the initial outbreak, nerve pain called postherpetic neuralgia can
set in. This pain lasts anywhere from 30 days to several months or even
years, and can be severe.
“We’ve had to refer many people to the pain clinic because the
postherpetic neuralgia becomes a chronic condition,” Dr. Dela Rosa says.
Postherpetic neuralgia is more common in people older than 60. It occurs
in less than 10 percent of people younger than 60 after a bout of shingles
but in more than 40 percent of people older than 60.
Shingles is caused by varicella, the same virus that causes chickenpox,
and occurs when the chickenpox virus lying dormant in nerve cells “wakes
up” in older people or others with health problems. The vaccine is
actually a boosted dose of the chickenpox vaccine currently given to
children.
Who Should Not Be Vaccinated
Up to one in 10 older patients are not candidates for the vaccine because
of weakened immune systems due to cancer therapy, organ transplants,
HIV/AIDS, or other causes.
The vaccine contains live but weakened varicella virus that could
overwhelm the immune systems of those patients, Dr. Dela Rosa added.
|