We performed field trials in the course of an epidemic in Finland to learn whether Group A memingococcal capsular polysaccharide vaccine protects infants and young children from meningitis. The first trial involved 130,178 children between the ages of three months and five years; 49,295 children received the vaccine, 48,977 received a control Haemophilus influenzae Type b polysaccharide vaccine, and 31.906 remained unvaccinated. No cases of meningitis or sepsis caused by Group A meningococci were seen in the first year of observation among the children vaccinated with meningococcal vaccine whereas six occurred among those vaccinated with the H. influenzae vaccine and 13 among those not vaccinated. In the second trial 21,007 children of the same ages received the meningococcal vaccine. No cases caused by Group A occurred among those vaccinated, although five to seven would have been expected within the year. Meningococcal Group A vaccine appears efficacious in young infants and children.
We studied the incidence among, risk factors for, and survival of adult patients with acute leukemia and hepatosplenic candidiasis during the period 1980 to 1993. Of 562 adult patients with acute leukemia, 38 (6.8%) had hepatosplenic candidiasis. The incidence of infection increased fivefold during the study period. The incidence was higher among patients with acute lymphatic leukemia (11.3%) than among those with acute myeloid leukemia (5.1%) (P = .01). The median survival was 9.5 months, and by the end of follow-up, 74% of patients had died. Patients whose leukemia was in remission before the last cytotoxic treatment preceding hepatosplenic candidiasis survived longer than did patients with newly diagnosed or refractory or relapsed leukemia (P = .0065). Eleven patients died within 3 months after the diagnosis of the infection: 7 of 16 with newly diagnosed leukemia, 4 of 10 with refractory or relapsed leukemia, and 0 of 12 with leukemia in remission (P = .028). In all of the patients who died within 3 months, infection was found at autopsy. In conclusion, the incidence of hepatosplenic candidiasis has significantly increased since 1980, and the outcome for patients with this infection is related to the stage of leukemia.
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