STORIES OF LIFE IN A CHANGING WORLD Scientists Crack a 50-Year-Old Mystery about the Measles Vaccine

Tuesday, 2nd of May 2017 Print

STORIES OF LIFE IN A CHANGING WORLD

Scientists Crack a 50-Year-Old Mystery about the Measles Vaccine

Worth a little pain? Back in 1990 a school boy got a measles shot in the U.K. and it turns out he got more than protection against the measles.

Back in the 1960s the U.S. started vaccinating kids for measles. As expected children stopped getting measles. But something else happened. Childhood deaths from all infectious diseases plummeted. Even deaths from diseases like pneumonia and diarrhea were cut by half.

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Scientists saw the same phenomenon when the vaccine came to England and parts of Europe. And they see it today when developing countries introduce the vaccine.

"In some developing countries where infectious diseases are very high the reduction in mortality has been up to 80 percent" says Michael Mina a postdoc in biology at Princeton University and a medical student at Emory University.

"So its really been a mystery — why do children stop dying at such high rates from all these different infections following introduction of the measles vaccine" he says.

Mina and his colleagues think they now might have an explanation. And they published their evidence Thursday in the journal Science.

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Now theres an obvious answer to the mystery: Children who get the measles vaccine are probably more likely to get better health care in general — maybe more antibiotics and other vaccines. And its true health care in the U.S. has improved since the 1960s.

But Mina and his colleagues have found theres more going on than that simple answer.

The team obtained epidemiological data from the U.S. Denmark Wales and England dating back to the 1940s. Using computer models they found that the number of measles cases in these countries predicted the number of deaths from other infections two to three years later.

"We found measles predisposes children to all other infectious diseases for up to a few years" Mina says. And the virus seems to do it in a sneaky way.

Like many viruses measles is known to suppress the immune system for a few weeks after an infection. But previous studies in monkeys have suggested that measles takes this suppression to a whole new level: It erases immune protection to other diseases Mina says.

So what does that mean? Well say you get the chicken pox when youre 4 years old. Your immune system figures out how to fight it. So you dont get it again. But if you get measles when youre 5 years old it could wipe out the memory of how to beat back the chicken pox. Its like the immune system has amnesia Mina says.

"The immune system kind of comes back. The only problem is that it has forgotten what it once knew" he says.

So after an infection a childs immune system has to almost start over rebuilding its immune protection against diseases it has already seen before.

This idea of "immune amnesia" is still just a hypothesis and needs more testing says epidemiologist William Moss who has studied the measles vaccine for more than a decade at Johns Hopkins University.

But the new study he says provides "compelling evidence" that measles affects the immune system for two to three years. Thats much longer than previously thought.

"Hence the reduction in overall child mortality that follows measles vaccination is much greater than previously believed" says Moss who wasnt involved in the study.

That finding should give parents more motivation to vaccinate their kids he says. "I think this paper will provide additional evidence — if its needed — of the public health benefits of measles vaccine" Moss says. "Thats an important message in the U.S. right now and in countries continuing to see measles outbreaks."

Because if the world can eliminate measles it will help protect kids from many other infections too.

 

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