
By Mrinalika Roy and Michael Erman
Dec 5 (Reuters) - Vaccine makers expressed concern on Friday's decision by a U.S. advisory panel to scrap its long-standing recommendation that all infants receive a hepatitis B vaccine at birth, a shift that public health experts fear will undermine decades of public health advances.
Merck, whose Recombivax HB has been a staple of the U.S. childhood immunization program, said it was "deeply concerned" by the decision of the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), warning it "puts infants at unnecessary risk of chronic infection, liver cancer and even death."
The company said the universal birth dose, which was instituted in 1991, has driven a 99% drop in acute hepatitis B cases in children and young adults and argued there is no evidence that delaying it provides any benefit. Infectious disease experts, as well as organizations representing pediatricians, pharmacists and public health professionals decried the move.
Hepatitis B, which can spread from mother to child during birth, can cause severe liver disease and early death, and has no cure. According to the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, the universal hepatitis B birth dose has prevented more than 500,000 childhood infections, cut infant cases by 95% and averted an estimated 90,100 deaths.
Many of the committee members, which were appointed by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a longtime vaccine skeptic, criticized the vaccine safety data and said that the U.S. vaccine schedule was out of step with other countries, particularly Denmark, that have low hepatitis B rates.
GSK said it stands behind the science supporting its vaccine and is awaiting the CDC's formal adoption of the recommendation to assess its impact.
Its vaccine, Engerix-B, has been approved since 1989, with 1.4 billion doses administered worldwide.
Merck and GSK shares fell about 1% each following the vote. U.S.-listed shares of Sanofi, another maker of hepatitis B shots, rose about 0.7%.
The panel now recommends only infants born to mothers who test positive for hepatitis B should receive the birth dose. Parents of infants whose mothers test negative are advised to decide, in consultation with a healthcare provider, when or whether to begin the vaccine series.
Merck urged the committee to return liaison organizations and frontline clinicians to its work groups, calling discussions led by medical and scientific experts "essential to informing sound, evidence-based recommendations that safeguard public health."
(Reporting by Mrinalika Roy in Bengaluru; Editing by Alan Barona)
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Turning to turkey’s tryptophan to boost mood? Not so fast - 2
Israel's ban on unsupervised reporters in Gaza causes strategic harm to legitimacy - 3
Exploring the School Application Cycle: Understudy Bits of knowledge - 4
Evaluated Smartwatches for Wellness Devotees - 5
The Main 10 Natural life Protection Associations
A coup too far: Why Benin's rebel soldiers failed where others in the region succeeded
One perk to marrying Richard Marx later in life? 'We don't have time' for stupid arguments, says Daisy Fuentes.
Hamas propaganda expert explains Israel's internal conflicts influenced Hamas's Oct. 7 assault
AI is providing emotional support for employees – but is it a valuable tool or privacy threat?
This widow influencer is using jokes to cope after her husband's death. It's OK if people don't get it.
AI’s errors may be impossible to eliminate – what that means for its use in health care
Which Brilliant Home Gadget Can't You Reside Without?
Finding China: Four Urban areas for a Remarkable Excursion
Thermo Fisher wins contracts as pharma shifts production to US, CEO says












