By JoNel Aleccia
Health writer
msnbc.com
updated
10:57 a.m. MT,
Thurs., Nov . 12, 2009
A
14-year-old Virginia boy is weak and
struggling to walk after coming down
with a reported case of
Guillain-Barre syndrome within hours
after receiving the H1N1 vaccine for
swine flu.
Jordan McFarland, a high school
athlete from Alexandria, Va., left
Inova Fairfax Hospital for Children
Tuesday night in a wheelchair nearly
a week after developing severe
headaches, muscle spasms and
weakness in his legs following a
swine
flu
shot
.
He will likely need the assistance
of a walker for four to six weeks,
plus extensive physical therapy.
“The
doctor
said I’ll recover fully, but it’s
going to take some time,” the
teenager said.
Jordan is among the first people in
the nation to report developing the
potentially life-threatening muscle
disorder after receiving the H1N1
vaccine this fall. His
alarming reaction was
submitted via
msnbc.com's
reader reporting tool, First Person,
by his stepmother, Arlene Connin.
Increased cases of GBS were found in
patients who received a 1976 swine
flu vaccine, but government health
officials say they've seen no rise
in the
condition
associated with the current
outbreak.
So
far, the federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention have received
five reports of GBS in people who
received the H1N1 vaccine since Oct.
6, not including Jordan’s case, said
Dr. Claudia J. Vellozzi, deputy
director for immunization safety.
Out of about 40 million doses of
H1N1 vaccine available to date,
that’s a far lower rate of GBS than
the 1 case that develops in every 1
million people who receive the
regular flu vaccine.
"It's
much less than we'd expect," she
said, adding that many cases go
unreported.
In
1976, about 1 additional case of GBS
developed in every 100,000 people
who were vaccinated against the
swine flu, according to the CDC.
Jordan's parents said doctors
diagnosed the teen with GBS, a rare
muscle disorder that develops when a
person’s own immune system attacks
the nerves, causing muscle weakness,
difficulty walking and sometimes
paralysis and death.
Hospital officials didn't dispute
that the boy had GBS, but refused to
comment on the boy's condition or
treatment, even after his family
granted permission.
“They
don’t want to create a fear or panic
in the community,” said Jordan's
stepmother, Connin.
Connin and Jordan’s father, Calvin
McFarland, both 38, believe the shot
sparked the illness that came on 18
hours after the boy’s vaccination.
No clear
link
But Vellozzi said there’s no clear
link between the new vaccine and the
disease.
“We
know that GBS and other illnesses
occur routinely in the U.S.,”
Vellozzi said, noting that 80 to 120
cases are diagnosed each week in the
general population.
“There are events that follow
vaccination. That’s what they are,
they happened to follow vaccination.
GBS
is among the most severe adverse
events being tracked with updated
systems developed by the CDC, the
Food and Drug Administration and the
American Academy of Neurology in
order to monitor the rollout of the
H1N1 flu vaccine.
So
far, CDC officials have received
about 1,700 reports of adverse
events linked to the new shot,
Vellozzi said. Of those, only about
4 percent, or 68, were coded as
serious. That’s on par with reports
regarding seasonal vaccine.
While
any harmful side effect can be
devastating for an individual, when
it comes to larger public health
issues, the
H1N1
virus
is considerably riskier than the
vaccine, experts say.
“The
H1N1 illness is making lots of
children very ill," Vellozzi said.
"There’s lots of illness and lots of
death."
So
far, more than 4,000 people have
died from H1N1 infection in the
U.S., according to latest estimates
by the CDC.
Since
the start of the H1N1 vaccine
campaign, the CDC has repeatedly
warned that certain conditions, such
as miscarriage, heart attack and
even GBS occur regardless of
immunization, and officials have
urged the public not to blame the
vaccine for the illnesses, but to
report promptly any suspected side
effects.
As of
early Wednesday, CDC officials said
they had received no report from
Inova Fairfax about Jordan's
condition. Later in the day,
however, hospital spokesman Tony
Raker indicated the hospital had
submitted the report.
After
hearing about Jordan's case from
msnbc.com, CDC officials advised the
family to report Jordan's case
themselves.
Vaccine critic Barbara Lowe Fisher,
president of the National Vaccine
Information Center in Vienna, Va.,
said assuming all potential side
effects are coincidence is a
mistake. Such an attitude is likely
to prevent doctors and other health
workers from reporting adverse
events in a timely manner, obscuring
a true picture of any problems.
Fisher said only between 1 percent
and 10 percent of adverse events are
reported to the government's Vaccine
Adverse Event Reporting System,
which was set up to track problems
with vaccines. A 1986 law requires
reporting of certain adverse events
to VAERS, but there are no sanctions
for not reporting, Fisher noted. CDC
officials said general reporting to
VAERS is voluntary.
Fisher said she suspects that many
more cases of GBS have occurred in
the wake of the H1N1 vaccines.
"We
basically have people blowing it
off," she said. "We need to make
sure people are reporting."
Eager for
protection
Like many parents
across the country, Arlene Connin
said she was eager to protect Jordan
and his brother, Lleyton, 7, against
the flu. When she took the boys to
their pediatrician for seasonal flu
shots on Nov. 5, the provider said
H1N1 vaccine was available, too.
There
was “not even a thought,” that
either boy would have a reaction,
Connin said. Within hours, however,
Jordan developed severe headaches,
chills and back spasms. The family
rushed him to the closest hospital,
Dewitt Army Community Hospital,
where doctors conducted neurological
exams, a CT scan and an EKG test.
The
small hospital didn’t have the
facilities to diagnose or treat
Jordan’s illness, so he was
transferred by ambulance on Nov. 6
to Inova Fairfax Hospital in Falls
Church, Va., a spokesman said.
Doctors there quickly gave Jordan
intravenous immunoglobulin, a
standard treatment for GBS, Connin
said.
“GBS,
that’s the diagnosis they gave us
and that’s how they were treating
him,” Connin said.
A
hospital spokesman, Tony Raker,
declined further comment on Jordan's
case. When an msnbc.com photographer
asked to view Jordan's chart, even
with his father's permission,
hospital officials refused.
Doctors are reluctant to discuss GBS
in connection with vaccines, Connin
said. Anti-vaccine groups frequently
cite the disorder as evidence of
vaccine dangers, which public health
officials fear will discourage
people from getting life-saving
protection, especially in the case
of H1N1.
Jordan’s experience has made his
parents think hard about
immunization, even though they’ve
always insisted on annual flu shots.
Under CDC guidelines for children 9
and younger, Lleyton should receive
another booster shot of H1N1 vaccine
to protect him fully against the
virus.
“I
have mixed emotions on that one,”
Calvin McFarland, the boys’ father,
said. “We’re not sure what we’re
going to do about that.”