Skip to content

I learned this morning that the New Yorker followed my lead on asterisks from last week's post. The commentary by Dhruv Khullar highlights "the most notorious asterisk in modern public health" and uses examples from George Orwell to Joseph Stalin and Trofim Lysenko, the latter a sort of combination of our current HHS Secretary and leaders in FDA and ACIP. The commentary will appear in the December 8 print issue of the magazine. I won't sue the publisher for plagiarism, the article is much more entertaining than my post was.

In the meantime, I'm mostly trying to recover from my Thanksgiving gluttony and steel myself for the ACIP meeting this week.

ACIP Meeting December 4-5: What I'll Be Watching For

As of early Sunday afternoon, the meeting agenda is still the original, vague draft version that appeared on November 14. The topics include the general pediatric and adolescent vaccine schedules, "adjuvants and contaminants," and hepatitis B vaccine. There is a placeholder called "Votes" but nothing listed there.

It is unusual not to see a more detailed agenda posted this close to the actual ACIP meeting. It makes it more difficult for those kept in the dark to prepare for the meeting. Of course no slides or background materials have been posted; by itself this isn't unusual - sometimes this wan't posted until the evening before the meeting, but in the new ACIP era a few of the presentations are posted only after the meeting, greatly interfering with understanding the speaker's presentation.

Regardless of these uncertainties, what I'm most looking for is inclusion of details on how information was synthesized. To achieve transparency and allow for others to review conclusions, ACIP (and every other scientific body) needs to follow systematic processes to understand data. Prior to the recent meetings, this included standardized review processes such as the GRADE (Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation) methodology and the Evidence to Recommendations (EtR) framework. All of these documents remain on the CDC website but have been used sparingly or not at all in the last 2 ACIP meetings.

I hope to be able to virtually attend both days of the meetings and will report back next week.

Around the Globe

I've said it before and I'll say it again. We should care about outbreaks in far-away countries; these are real people who are suffering, in many cases because they don't have access to relatively simple public health tools and medications/vaccines that could prevent these outbreaks. For those in whom altruism is not at the forefront, remember that in this age of jet travel and plummeting vaccine coverage anyone anywhere can be personally affected by far-away outbreaks.

Enough soapbox oratory. I'll touch on 2 outbreak updates this week.

First, WHO's Weekly Epidemiological Record (volume 100, issue 48) has a measles update. Of course we don't need to journey beyond our own US borders to know that things aren't good, but a global view is helpful. Since 2000, the numbers of countries experiencing outbreaks fell for a while but now are increasing.

No surprise, the graph below shows vaccination works. Note the y-axis is in millions of deaths.

The WRISM section below has more details about the latest in the US.

WHO also had an update on cholera covering this calendar year so far. Cholera is a prime example of an infection that mostly wouldn't exist if proper sanitation measures were in place. Here's this year's geographic distribution. The one western hemisphere hotspot is Haiti.

The report goes into detail about specific regions and countries. The one piece of good news I found was that the supply of oral cholera vaccine is now at 7.9 million doses, a big improvement and above the emergency threshold of 5 million doses.

The Week's Articles of Interest

I guess I'm doing things in pairs this week, 2 articles caught my eye.

The first concerned one of the banes of my former clinical practice - recurrent staphylococcal skin and soft tissue infections. I don't know how many children and families I talked through decolonization protocols when I was in practice, but sometimes I felt like our time would be better spent if I just invented some sort of incantation ceremony for them. Now, we have results from a randomized controlled trial from investigators at Washington University to give us a little better definition of effectiveness of one approach to staphylococcal decolonization.

During the years 2015 - 2021, 196 index patients with a total of 623 household contacts underwent an initial 5-day decolonization regimen and then were randomized into 3 different 3-month decolonization regimens. The initial 5-day decolonization that everyone received consisted of twice daily nasal mupirocin and daily chlorhexidine body washes. Infants younger than 2 months were excluded from decolonization. The 3 randomization protocols were 3 months in length and included 1) periodic personal decolonization with twice weekly chlorhexidine body washes and nasal mupirocin on 5 consecutive days once monthly; 2) an environmental hygiene regimen with weekly bleach wipe-down of bathroom, kitchen, and electronic surfaces, weekly laundering of all bed lines, weekly replacement of kitchen sponges, and daily replacement of kitchen and bathroom tools with clean towels or use of disposable towels; and 3) the integrated approach combining all aspects of regimens 1 and 2. Samples to determine colonization were obtained and folllow-up was performed at 1, 3, 6, and 9 months, with the primary outcome targeted at 3 months. They monitored colonization rates, which I won't present here, as well as new episodes of infection.

Here's the summary of all their findings for the most important outcome, skin and soft tissue infections. "Index patients and
household contacts with SSTI in the past year assigned to the Integrated-Approach had a lower cumulative SSTI incidence at 6-months(p=0.04) and 9-months(p=0.04) compared to the PeriodicPersonal and Environmental-Hygiene combined group."

If you struggle with advising these families, this article will help you and them decide on options to prevent infections.

The second study dealt with the problems in use of trimethroprim-sulfamethoxazole in adolescents and young adults with respiratory infection. It's a retrospective cohort study from Canada covering the years 2003-2023 and should at least make you think twice about using tmp/smx for respiratory illness in this patient population.

Compared to amoxicillin and oral cephalosporins, use of tmp/smx was associated with higher rates of serious outcomes.

In my practice I never (maybe there was a rare exception) recommended tmp/smx for treating outpatient pneumonia. However, because these outcomes are very rare, the absolute risk (indicated by RD above) is pretty small. Both the retrospective cohort study design and the small absolute differences in outcomes somewhat hinder the certainty of the outcome estimates, which is why I would put this in the "think twice" before using tmp/smx rather than strongly advising abandonment of tmp/smx for this purpose.

WRISM

On a national average, winter respiratory infection season hasn't started, but there is a bit of regional variation.

We are in for a bad flu season, although the reasons for that have been obfuscated by some of the lay press reports (IMHO). The primary reason we are in for a bad one is that the primary strain circulating is influenza A H3N2, which almost always causes more severe illness than does the other influenza A strain circulating in recent years, H1N1. Some lay press reports have hyped the AH3N2 clade K variant prominent in Europe and elsewhere which may be somewhat less covered by our current vaccine. However, this past week we have a preliminary report from England, which is experiencing an early start to their flu season, about vaccine effectiveness against this variant strain during the period September 29 to November 2, 2025. VE in preventing ED visits and hospitalizations was actually pretty good for children and adolescents infected with influenza A generally and with AH3N2 in particular. It is likely that the majority of the H3N2 infections in England during this period were subclade K.

Note the wide confidence intervals due to low numbers available for analysis this early in the flu season. Also included in the report was a brief mention of immunized ferret antisera reactivity with subclade K virus strains that showed significant decreases, but apparently not severe enough to eliminate VE at least in this preliminary analysis.

So, we likely will have a more severe flu season in the US this winter because AH3N2 will be the predominant strain. The low vaccination rates will add to the problem. Please encourage flu vaccination.

Also on the flu horizon, I was saddened to learn that the adult with underlying risk factors who was infected with influenza AH5N5 did not survive. There is now further evidence to suggest that he acquired his infection from his/her backyard domestic bird flock. CDC still has good advice for backyard poultry safety.

Last but not least, the latest on measles in the US. We're now up to 1798 cases.

It's almost certain the US will join Canada in losing its measles elimination status. Our steady flow of new infections isn't going to stop before the end of January when we will have a year's worth of ongoing endemic transmission, which is the elimination certification criterion used by WHO.

Soapbox Oratory

I'm not happy with getting up on my soapbox about political issues in this blog - I'm not a politician; in fact, I'd make a terrible politician because I don't like to cherry-pick information, obscure nuances, and reduce my message to catchy soundbites. I'll be challenged to hold myself in check for the next ACIP meeting.

In the meantime, I dug a little deeper into the origin of the soapbox term. It started in the late 19th century with snake oil salesmen and others fashioning speaking platforms from the wooden boxes used for packaging wholesale goods for delivery to retailers. I learned that the golden age of Soapbox Oratory was the period just before World War I.

Unfortunately, my dogfood delivery box does not function well as a speaking platform. Maybe that's a sign I should get off my soapbox.

When I saw the latest CDC online shenanigans I laughed, briefly. It's preposterous but also real.

The asterisked heading is contradicted by everything else on the page.

The remainder of the page is a useless compilation of "facts" ignoring the issue that it is impossible to prove, in an individual case, whether an exposure to something caused a particular outcome. One commentator has compared this to calling for studies investigating the role of ingestion of a popular soft drink on causing autism. Not only does this stance by the new CDC increase confusion and vaccine hesitancy, it risks diverting limited resources to studies that will not answer any useful question.

Diphtheria in Africa

WHO provided a situation update on diphtheria in the African region. It's discouraging.

Outbreaks are ongoing in 8 countries: Algeria, Chad, Guinea, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, and South Africa. As of November 2, the total number of suspected cases in Africa was 20,412 including 1252 deaths (case fatality rate 6.1%). Mali, Mauritania, and Niger seem to be the "hottest" spots for new infections recently.

Management of the outbreaks is complicated by limited laboratory resources and insufficient supply of antitoxin.

Vaccine coverage rates are somewhat variable among the affected countries.

Although the organism, Corynebacterium diphtheriae, is widely distributed in the environment worldwide, including the US, most infections occur following exposure to respiratory secretions or skin lesions of individuals with active disease. Transmission also can occur from asymptomatic carriers of the organism. The risk of this spreading to the US population is relatively low but could rise if population vaccination rates continue to fall. This includes adults who don't update their Tdap every 10 years.

MMWR is Back

MMWR may not be able to hold on to the W(eekly) in its title if this year's trends continue, but we did see a new issue appear on November 20; the previous issue was from October 2. The number of topics seems to be diminishing on average this year, only 2 this week, but both were excellent studies and dealt with RSV.

The first report looked at implementation of nirsevimab administration to newborns at birthing hospitals in the US. The Vaccines for Children program will pay for administration of this long-acting monoclonal antibody. The product is recommended to be administered within the first week of life during RSV season for infants born to mothers who did not receive RSV vaccine. However, this payment requires hospitals to enroll with the VFC. If the hospital isn't enrolled, those newborns won't receive nirsevimab during their stay, and we know that many may not be seen for outpatient follow-up by 7 days of age.

Hospital VFC enrollment has increased, but it is still a glass half-full situation. "A CDC effort with professional organizations and health departments to enroll birthing hospitals in VFC was associated with an increase in enrolled birthing hospitals from 763 (27.1% of 2,817 facilities) at the beginning of the 2023–24 RSV season to 1,021 (36.2%) by the end of the 2024–25 RSV season. The number of nirsevimab doses ordered approximately doubled." Rates for individual states varied widely. I was ashamed to see that my home state, Maryland, had only 6 of 33 hospitals enrolled by March 31, 2025.

The second report looked at effectiveness of nirsevimab in preventing ICU admissions in infants. It was a case-control study of 27 hospitals in 24 states in the Overcoming RSV Network which is an extension of the Overcoming COVID Network.

The study included 457 children admitted to ICU with a positive RSV test compared to 302 RSV-negative children. Nirsevimab was 80% effective (95% CI 70-86%) in preventing RSV-associated (positive test and admitted for respiratory symptoms) ICU admission and 83% (74-90%) against respiratory failure. These numbers are for children who received nirsevimab for a median of 52 days and 50 days, respectively, prior to onset of the endpoint. More evidence that nirsevimab is a game-changer for RSV disease.

Current Epidemiology

Winter respiratory infections still appear to be lowish nationally with covid, flu, and RSV all officially very low according to CDC. The map as of data through November 15 shows a little variability, typical for this time of year.

Again, look for RSV and influenza to take off soon.

Confirmed measles cases now stand at 1753 in the US.

If we've learned nothing else this past year, it seems that local pockets of mostly unimmunized individuals are feeding ongoing measles transmission, with overall falling immunization rates contributing to higher risk of spreading outside these communities. Here are the hotspots for the past 2 weeks according to the Johns Hopkins site.

I'm Thankful for ....

As we enter Thanksgiving week, I remain thankful for many things, chief among them my family who somehow continues to put up with me. It would take a few hours to compose a semi-comprehensive list of everything I'm thankful for, but I'll mention a few.

  • Friends - any friends I have are mostly because of my association with my LSW; they tolerate me so that they can talk with her. I'm the equivalent of the odd green jello salad that accompanies the beautifully-cooked turkey for Thanksgiving dinner. You take a few bites of the jello out of politeness, but what you really came for is the turkey, dressing, gravy, and other accompaniments.
  • My health - of course not perfect, but I've been a remarkably fortunate septuagenarian so far.
  • Asterisks
    • In these pages, I've mostly used the asterisk to follow "LSW" when referring to my Long Suffering Wife.
    • They are very useful as a wild card for searching in PubMed and other search engines.
    • I was surprised to learn that the asterisk dates back to the Ice Age.
    • Our HHS Secretary presumably used the asterisk to taunt a certain Louisiana senator:
      • "* The header "Vaccines do not cause autism" has not been removed due to an agreement with the chair of the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee that it would remain on the CDC website."

Have a wonderful Thanksgiving!

https://homecookingmemories.com/lime-green-jello-salad-recipe-cottage-cheese-pineapple/ (This recipe is not quite the same as the family recipe I use.)

Spurred by lay press comparisons to current events, I finally re-read F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, just about 50 years after my first reading. Not only does it have a great last line, it truly is a great piece of literature.

News Niblets

It appears we have a first for bird flu - human infection with influenza A H5N5. This strain has been present in birds for a long time, but an "older adult with underlying health conditions" now appears to be the first human infection with H5N5, according to Washington state health officials. The likely source is the patient's backyard poultry flock that had been exposed to wild birds, but we don't have full investigation results yet. It's not any cause for alarm, just another milestone in the bird flu saga.

Ethiopia now reports its first outbreak of Marburg disease, one of the hemorrhagic fever virus illnesses similar to Ebola. Marburg virus disease has been reported previously in several African countries; the name comes from the original 1967 outbreak in laboratory workers in Germany, spreading to what is now Serbia.

https://www.cdc.gov/marburg/outbreaks/index.html

I've been waiting to comment on the infant botulism outbreak that's been in the news, hoping for more details. It looks like it's going to take a while to sort out, but one brand of infant formula seems to be implicated. It's hard to test for the toxin, but I can't help but wonder if budget cuts have slowed this process further. I'd like to know whether the outbreak is related to processing at this one formula company or if it might be a problem with contamination of ingredients that could pose a risk for consumption of other infant formulas. This is the distribution of the 23 cases with known exposure to the implicated formula, ByHeart Whole Nutrition Infant Formula.

Hot off the presses, the next ACIP meeting is now scheduled for December 4 and 5. The preliminary agenda is pretty vague but also ominous.

WRIS (and Measles)

CDC is back, at least to pre-shutdown levels, and some of the respiratory illness reporting has been updated. Things are still relatively slow. Expect flu and RSV to ramp up pretty soon.

CIDRAP, among other sources, has noted that an influenza A H3N2 subclade K is circulating. It isn't clear how well this year's vaccine is matched for this subclade, though that should be fairly easy to predict with in vitro testing.

Measles soldiers on in the US.

More on Pediatric Covid Vaccine Effectiveness

This report is very brief but also important. A boatload of investigators analyzed data from a multisite electronic health record database to assess VE of the 2023-2024 mRNA covid vaccines in immunocompetent children 9 months to 17 years of age. They specifically looked at the outcome for lab-confirmed emergency or urgent care visits associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection. A picture is worth a thousand (or more) words.

In a real-world setting, vaccine was effective for all age groups, though waned with longer time after vaccination. Moderna vaccine might have had higher VE in the younger ages, though confidence intervals did overlap. Of course, we'd also like to know safety data to have a better appreciation for risk/benefit of vaccination, but this study didn't address that.

Acetaminophen During Pregnancy

This is a first for me in these pages. I'm highlighting a study that didn't directly look at a pediatric infectious disease. I'm going out on this limb because I think it highights very well how cherry-picking of data, so common with current HHS officials, can lead to erroneous conclusions.

The study is an "umbrella" review of systematic reviews of maternal exposure to paracetamol (acetaminophen, e.g. Tylenol) during pregnancy and risk of autism spectrum disorder and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in the offspring of these pregnancies. What the heck is an umbrella review?

Simply put, it's a review of reviews. More helpful, perhaps, is to understand that the intention is to summarize and assess quality of prior systematic reviews and/or meta-analyses, usually on a broad research question rather than a very narrow issue. Umbrella reviews focus on quality of included studies and aim to provide a more comprehensive view of relative strengths and weaknesses of interventions or associations.

Key point - an umbrella review includes a comprehensive review of quality of included studies utilizing pre-determined, standardized assessment tools.

With regard to the use of acetaminophen during pregnancy, this umbrella review helped to explain why studies should utilize sibling controls to determine risks of ASD and ADHD. When matched siblings without gestational acetaminophen exposure are included, risk for adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes disappear. HHS officials had essentially ignored this important consideration, probably because it didn't fit their predetermined conclusions.

By the way, in doing some background searching on this topic, I came upon a startling page on the CDC website:

Reading the entire page, I couldn't find anything that even referred to or clashed with this "biological reality." Wow.

I Choose the Glass Half-Full

"So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past."

Multiple lay press reports and editorials referred to The Great Gatsby at the time of the shutdown when the "haves" were organizing grand ballroom events and parties while the "have-nots" waited in lines to get food during the government shutdown. I knew that somewhere in my house I had an old copy of the book, and finally I found it.

What I had forgotten was that the last and only time I had read this book was for a college course I took, probably in 1974 or 1975. I know this because my name and residential college at my university was written inside the cover, and the text was filled with mysterious annotations I had made. Apparently I was planning to write a paper on the importance of color in the book, but I have no recollection of doing that. It's interesting to me now that the color gold in the book is most associated with the "old money" characters who are truly at the top of the pecking order; Gatsby's new money (represented by yellow) still won't carry him into this elite class.

Also, I was amused to see that the full retail price I paid for this book was $1.65.

But back to that last sentence, a subject for many scholars over the years. It could be interpreted as stressing the futility of life and the lie of the American Dream - the haves will always be on top. That's the glass half-empty view. Choosing the glass half-full might be a stretch and requires a different interpretation of the word "borne" as a rebirth rather than a burden that holds us back. If we keep hanging in there, better times will come. I will try to hang on and look forward to the day when we won't need to worry so much about politics, obfuscation, and disinformation impacting public health.

Relative calm in the pediatric infectious diseases world, though anything but that in the political scene surrounding vaccines and medical insurance. I was pleased to see that the Vaccine Integrity Project plans a review of hepatitis B immunization, hopefully available before the still-unscheduled next meeting of the ACIP.

While you ponder your Thanksgiving meal menus, here's a few items of interest from last week.

More Covid Vaccine Liability Information

In my posting of October 26 I reported on a webinar presented by the AAP and the Common Health Coalition. At the time I only had a few screen shots to share; neither organization had posted the recording or slides on their web sites. I promised to give you a follow-up when I had access to these materials, and the CHC came through this past week. Here's the pertinent links directly from their email:

"You can now access the webinar recording, the presentation slides, our updated Shared Clinical Decision-Making explainer, and liability resource. The American Academy of Pediatrics’ COVID-19 Vaccine FAQs and Pediatric COVID-19 Vaccine Dosing Guide are also available. If you have liability-related questions or vaccine administration concerns, you may submit them to AAP here."

All of these links contain very good information, worth browsing if you have concerns about covid vaccine administration. I do note, however, that the last link for the AAP is not really to ask questions - it appears to be more of a notification system so that AAP is aware of issues and can try to get ahead of any problematic issues and explore them, rather than directly answering individual questions.

WRIS and Measles

CDC is still putting out numbers for measles, one of the few areas where they are still working during the shutdown/cutbacks. New cases are fairly steady, thankfully not approaching the chaos of last spring's Texas outbreak. We're up to 1681 cases with 3 deaths as of November 5. Meanwhile, Canada's horrible numbers have reached 5138 cases; Alberta and Ontario provinces lead the way.

Tracking of winter respiratory infections, including covid, is nonexistent at the CDC. Other sources continue to suggest mild upswings in some areas of the country, but nothing substantial so far.

Immunizations in Gaza

Today, November 9, marks the start of a catch-up immunization campaign in Gaza. Three rounds are planned to ensure that children have received at least 3 doses of the pentavalent (diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, hepatitis B, and Hib), polio, rotavirus, and pneumococcal vaccines and 2 doses of MMR. TB (BCG vaccine) also was mentioned. UNICEF is providing the vaccines and equipment including refrigeration. The announcement didn't provide a lot of details, but this statement caught my eye: "Before the conflict, Gaza maintained 54 immunization facilities and ranked among the top globally with an overall 98 per cent vaccination coverage rate for children. Today, 31 facilities are no longer operational after being damaged or destroyed in indiscriminate attacks, while the routine vaccination coverage rate has dropped below 70 per cent."

The second and third rounds of immunizations are planned for December 2025 and January 2026. Let's hope they are successful.

Rift Valley Fever

I've been watching this outbreak in 2 West African countries, Mauritania and Senegal, for several weeks now. RVF is primarily a disease of livestock but can spread to humans via exposure to contaminated meat or from infected mosquitoes. The human case tally so far is at 404 with 42 deaths. The risk to humans is not only from infection itself but also from its effects on food sources. Here's a little aid for those of us who are geographically challenged.

And a quick cartoon about transmission cycles:

Vascular and Inflammatory Conditions Following Covid Infection and Vaccination

This study from England focused on children < 18 years of age in the time period from January 1, 2020 to December 31, 2022 and was a retrospective cohort study utilizing electronic health record data. Given the study dates, this would have stretched from the first appearance of the original ancestral variant through the delta variant and into the earlier omicron stages. It included almost 14 million subjects to evaluate for covid infection and 3.4 million to evaluate for vaccination status. All vaccines administered during that time in England were the Pfizer vaccine. Here are the raw numbers for outcomes, focus on the 2 columns for incidence rates.

The trend in the blue bars below is towards fewer adverse events with vaccination compared to natural infection, in line with other studies. Also, multiple studies have shown that myocarditis following SARS-CoV-2 infection is more severe and longer lasting than that seen following vaccination.

So, more support for having vaccinated children in the first couple years of the pandemic. As I've said before, the current covid vaccination rate for children is very low and limits ability to perform analyses for rare adverse events.

Thanksgiving Menus

Every Thanksgiving I'm focused on gratitude and cooking. (Some of you may remember my account of the Wiedermann Thanksgiving massacree of 199? in my post of November 24, 2024.) This year will be a little different from our usual Thanksgiving because none of our family is able to come here for a banquet. Thankfully (pun intended?) friends have invited us to their house for Thanksgiving. I'll need to think carefully about which dish(es) to contribute, perhaps a more difficult task than just cooking everything I can think of.

Neither my LSW nor I is depicted in the painting below.

Alas, I lapsed into the sixth deadly sin due to a combination of leftover Halloween candy and a discovery of cookie butter. It's pretty easy to stuff my face while reading medical articles and typing this week's blog.

Maternal Covid Infection Associated With Neurodevelopmental Disabilities in Offspring

This retrospective cohort study from Massachusetts provides strong evidence that SARS-CoV-2 infection of a pregnant person carries with it an association with neurodevelopmental disabilities, including autism, in the offspring of that pregnancy. The lay press reported the findings quickly, but it's important to realize that a) this association is entirely expected, based on animal studies and experience in humans with other viruses like influenza, and b) at this point it is just an association, not proving causality, and the study design as a retrospective cohort dependent on database registries leaves it open to error. Having said that, let's dig a little deeper.

The cohort was comprised of all births at 2 academic and 6 community hospitals within a single medical system in Massachusetts from March 1, 2020, to May 31, 2021. The children's records were queried for any neurodevelopmental disability diagnostic codes up to 36 months of age. The timing of the cohort is important. It was early in the pandemic, at a time when the less reliable home testing kits weren't used as frequently and those home antigen tests during pregnancy were likely to be confirmed by PCR, assuming the women were receiving prenatal care. Also, the population in general was highly motivated to be tested for covid; in other words, ascertainment of covid episodes during pregnancy likely were more reliable than what we commonly see later in the pandemic and beyond. It's also important to note that vaccination wasn't available for much of the study period. Only 8% of mothers in the non-infected group had received at least 1 covid vaccine, compared to 2% of mothers who had been infected - the differences in vaccination rates most likely are due to socioeconomic factors.

Here's what the investigators found. Of a little over 18,000 live births in the cohort, 861 mothers (4.8% of the cohort of live births), were diagnosed with SARS-CoV-2 infection during pregnancy. By age 36 months, 140 (16%) of children exposed to maternal infection had received at least one neurodevelopmental disability diagnosis, compared to 1680 (a little less than 10%) in the unexposed birth group.

Now comes the hard part, trying to correct for all those other maternal factors that are associated with increased neurodevelopmental disabilities in infants. Known risk factors such as male sex, preterm birth, Hispanic ethnicity, and public insurance status had higher rates of disabilities in this cohort, lending support to the accuracy of the overall findings. Also supportive of the findings was an association with infection during the third trimester, an important time for fetal neurodevelopment.

After performing a multivariate analysis to correct for multiple confounding risk factors, the association with maternal covid infection during pregnancy remained significant independent of these risks. Unfortunately, one very important risk factor for autism and similar disabilities, genetics, couldn't be analyzed. This would likely require a prospective study with sibling controls.

Note that we aren't talking about vertical transmission of the virus from mother to fetus, such as occurs with CMV and toxoplasmosis. Vertical transmission of SARS-CoV-2 from mother to fetus is rare, although I did participate in the care of one such newborn early in the pandemic. The biologic plausibility of maternal viral infection without vertical transmission causing neurodevelopmental disability is supported by many animal studies and likely involves some sort of maternal immune activation that interferes with the developing newborn brain.

These findings shouldn't change practice now. First, we don't know if the findings would persist in an era where almost everyone has some form of immune experience with SARS-CoV-2. Second, we don't know the effect vaccination might have on this process. And again, remember we're talking about association rather than causation.

Respiratory Vaccines Are Good

In my August 24 posting I commented on the Vaccine Integrity Project's systematic review of respiratory vaccine effectiveness and safety. Now that report is fully available in a new publication this past week. It doesn't contain any substantially new material or conclusions, but it's a lot easier to evaluate the numbers in print than it is with the August slides and oral presentations. Vaccines for covid, RSV, and influenza all had significant benefit against a variety of outcomes in children and adults. (I'm not showing data for covid, the report didn't contain any nice tables or graphs for pediatric covid.)

Here is a forest plot for RSV vaccine effectiveness for preventing hospitalizations in various settings:

And for influenza vaccinations:

This should be the go-to study for any provider needing to explain respiratory vaccine benefits and risks to patients and families.

Wikipedia Under Attack

Some of you probably saw that Elon Musk and others are developing "non-woke" alternatives to Wikipedia. Regular readers of this blog certainly will have noticed I frequently link to Wikipedia articles, not with respect to medical issues but rather to whatever little quirks and digressions I find myself exploring in a particular week. I certainly haven't perceived any liberal or conservative bias in the postings. In fact, I would expect less bias in a publication that can be edited by multitudes online; any mistakes or biases tend to get corrected pretty quickly. Wikipedia even has its own entry on ideological bias in its pages.

I decided to look at a medically-related post, in this case ivermectin. Early in the pandemic I followed this topic very closely; all of us were desperate for any intervention that seem beneficial, at the same time worried about just trying something that could end up useless or, worse, harmful. It turns out that Wikipedia has a separate post specifically for ivermectin during the pandemic. I read through everything, it was very reasonable and didn't even mention the President's wild ravings about what he thought was a wonderful drug for covid. I found no bias, unless you count the bias where more credit is given to bonafide clinical trials published in a peer-reviewed journal compared to some podcaster's unsubstantiated opinion. Musk's new Grokipedia has an identically titled post that I reviewed. I found it to be credible in some areas but extremely opinionated in others to the extent that I felt that the content obscured the fact that the drug was ineffective.

Asymptomatic Bird Flu?

Influenza A H5N1, the "bird flu" that's been plaguing our dairy cow and poultry industry plus several humans in the US for a while now, hasn't been closely studied beyond symptomatic people mostly exposed to infected animals or cow milk. A recent review sheds more light on asymptomatic H5N1 infections. Investigators from the CDC looked for studies with molecular evidence of infection with or without serologic confirmation (note that some asymptomatic people with influenza never show seroconversion). They found a handful of cases, including a couple with both molecular and serologic evidence of infection,

H5N1 continues to lurk out there, waiting perhaps for some genetic reassortment that facilitates human spread. As an aside, I noted that the CDC article utilized the services of a medical librarian to find these articles, and I recalled that librarians have been cut from CDC recently.

H5N1 continues to infect animals and humans around the globe, perhaps waiting for that unfortunate reassortment that will facilitate human to human transmission. We need CDC and its librarians to help keep us safe.

WRIS

Winter respiratory infection season hasn't hit us yet, though the lay press has latched onto a mild upturn in respiratory illnesses in the past week. We should be a bit more wary of tracking accuracy this year due to the double wammy hit to CDC of funding cuts and now the federal shutdown, but I think we'll see significantly more respiratory illness starting in the next few weeks.

In my meanderings around the web, I noted a map on POPHIVE showing RSV queries in Google by state. Web searching activity has been advocated by many as one way to assess disease activity. RSV usually begins in the South, especially in Florida, so I was a little surprised to see a lot of Google RSV searches in places like Maine and the northern midwest and mountain states.

We'll see if those states start RSV season a little early.

Cookie Butter

About a week ago I happened on a recipe for "Holiday Rocky Road" by one of my favorite chefs, Sohla El-Waylly. She has some unusual cooking ideas, plus she is very entertaining. If you want to have a smile plus see how to gorge yourself on chocolate, cookie butter, and other goodies, take a look at her recipe video.

Bon Appetit!