Vaccine-preventable diseases

From IDWiki
Revision as of 22:49, 29 April 2020 by Aidan (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{| class="wikitable sortable" ! Disease ! Mode of transmission ! Incubation period (range) ! Infective period ! Basic reproductive number ! Vaccine name ! Type of vaccine ! Nu...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Disease Mode of transmission Incubation period (range) Infective period Basic reproductive number Vaccine name Type of vaccine Number and timing of doses Effectiveness
Diphtheria mode 2 to 5 days (1 to 10) up to 2 weeks (rarely 4 weeks, with very rare asymptomatic chronic shedders) 6 to 7 Td, Tdap, DTaP, DTap-Hib-IPV toxoid 2, 4, 6, and 18 months; booster at 4 to 6 years and again ten years later 97 to 100% for at least 10 years
Haemophilus influenzae type b mode 2 to 4 days may be prolonged, until 24 hours after antibiotics subunit conjugate type of vaccine 2, 4, 6, and 18 months 95 to 100%
Hepatitis B bloodborne and sexually-transmitted 60 to 90 days (24 to 180) R0 monovalent HB, or DTaP-HB-IPV-Hib subunit 2 to 3 doses; timing varies by province
monovalent: 0, 1, and 6 months
95 to 100%
HPV contact HPV2, HPV4, and HPV9 recombinant subunit 0, 2, and 6 months (2 month dose optional if less than 15 years old) 100% for types covered; prevents 60 to 70% of anogenital and cervical cancers; lasts at least 10 years
Influenza droplet 2 days (1 to 4) 1 day before to 5 days after symptom onset 1.3 to 1.8 IIV or LAIV inactivated or live attenuated 1 dose annually; 2 given 6 months apart if first time and under 9 years 40 to 60%
Measles airborne 8 to 12 days (7 to 21) 4 days before to 4 days after rash onset 12 to 18 MMR or MMRV live attentuated 2 doses in childhood (12 months and 4 to 6 years) (as MMR/MMRV) 5% have waning immunity within a few years (hence the second dose)
Meningococcus droplet 3 to 4 days (2 to 10) Men-C-ACYW (± 4CMenB) conjugated subunit varies by province effectiveness
Mumps 16 to 18 days (12 to 25) up to 5 days after onset of parotitis 4 to 7 MMR or MMRV live attenuated 2 doses in childhood (12 months and 4 to 6 years) (as MMR/MMRV) 62% to 91% for 1 dose and 76% to 95% for 2 doses; may wane over years to decades
Pertussis droplet 9 to 10 days (6 to 20, rarely up to 42) greatest during catarrhal period and first 2 weeks after cough onset; no longer contagious after 5 days of antibiotics 12 to 17 Tdap, DTaP, DTap-Hib-IPV toxoid 2, 4, 6, and 18 months; booster at 4 to 6 years and again 10 years later 90% for childhood pertussis, and 90% in pregnancy for protecting infants less than 3 months
Pneumococcus droplet unknown; as short as 1 to 3 days up to 24 hours following antibiotics Pneu-C-13 or Pneu-P-23 conjugate or polysaccharide Pneu-C-13: 2, 4, and 12 months; or 2, 4, 6, and 12-15 months Pneu-C-13: 86 to 97% against included serotypes; Pneu-P-23: 80% in adults, but 50-80% in elderly and high-risk adults
Polio fecal-oral 6 to 20 days (3 to 35) highest at disease onset, and up to 3 to 6 weeks 5 to 7 DTaP-IPV-Hib or DTaP-HB-IPV-Hib (or OPV) killed (or live attenuated) 2, 4, 6, and 18 months 95%, up to 100% with an additional booster
Rotavirus fecal-oral 18 horus to 3 days from a few days before to 21 days after symptom onset mono- or pentavalent live attenuated 2 (monovalent) or 3 (pentavalent) doses 4 weeks apart; complete between 6 weeks and 8 months of life 74 to 87%; 85 to 98% against severe diarrhea
Rubella droplet 14 to 17 days (14 to 21) 1 week before to 4 days after onset of rash (but up to age 1 year for CRS) 6 to 7 MMR or MMRV live attenuated 1 dose needed, but usually given 2 doses at 12 months and 4 to 6 years as MMR/MMRV 95% with one dose; may wane in 10% of people over years to decades
Smallpox droplet or contact 10 to 14 days (7 to 19) highest in early disease, but infective from onset of rash until all scabs disappear (about 3 weeks) booster every 10 years if at risk lyphilized vaccinia live attenuated 95%
Tetanus percutaneous inoculation 3 to 21 days (1 day to several months) no person-to-person transmission Td, Tdap, DTaP, DTap-Hib-IPV toxoid 2, 4, 6, and 18 months; booster at 4 to 6 years and again 10 years later 99% but declines over time
Varicella airborne 14 to 16 days (10 to 21 days) 2 days before rash onset until all lesions crusted MMRV or VZV live attenuated 12 months and again at 18 months to 6 years 85% with one dose, 98% with two doses (and 100% against severe disease)
Zoster contact until all lesions crusted Zostavax or Shingrix live attenuated or adjuvanted subunit