Do people with flu shots shed the influenza virus more than those who aren't vaccinated?











up vote
51
down vote

favorite
4












This 2018 Collective Evolution article claims:




Once recent study, however, did bother to look at the question of whether the vaccine prevents transmission. Published on January 18, 2018, in the journal of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, PNAS, the study’s authors screened volunteers with confirmed cases of influenza and took breath samples. And among their findings was “an association between repeated vaccination and increased viral aerosol generation” [...]



In fact, subjects who had received the influenza vaccine in both the current and the previous season were found to shed over six times more aerosolized virus than those who did not get a flu shot during either season.




Do people who receive flu shots shed the virus more than people who don't?










share|improve this question




















  • 17




    what does "shed" mean in the context of a virus. I've never heard this expression
    – Michael J.
    Nov 14 at 22:53






  • 8




    @MichaelJ.: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viral_shedding
    – Oddthinking
    Nov 14 at 23:23










  • @JoelCoehoorn: Sorry, I rolled that edit back. Whether a person is shedding a virus or spreading it are two different things. If I touch six doorknobs and the other person only one, I am spreading the virus more. That's not what is meant here, the claim is clearly about shedding.
    – DevSolar
    2 days ago















up vote
51
down vote

favorite
4












This 2018 Collective Evolution article claims:




Once recent study, however, did bother to look at the question of whether the vaccine prevents transmission. Published on January 18, 2018, in the journal of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, PNAS, the study’s authors screened volunteers with confirmed cases of influenza and took breath samples. And among their findings was “an association between repeated vaccination and increased viral aerosol generation” [...]



In fact, subjects who had received the influenza vaccine in both the current and the previous season were found to shed over six times more aerosolized virus than those who did not get a flu shot during either season.




Do people who receive flu shots shed the virus more than people who don't?










share|improve this question




















  • 17




    what does "shed" mean in the context of a virus. I've never heard this expression
    – Michael J.
    Nov 14 at 22:53






  • 8




    @MichaelJ.: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viral_shedding
    – Oddthinking
    Nov 14 at 23:23










  • @JoelCoehoorn: Sorry, I rolled that edit back. Whether a person is shedding a virus or spreading it are two different things. If I touch six doorknobs and the other person only one, I am spreading the virus more. That's not what is meant here, the claim is clearly about shedding.
    – DevSolar
    2 days ago













up vote
51
down vote

favorite
4









up vote
51
down vote

favorite
4






4





This 2018 Collective Evolution article claims:




Once recent study, however, did bother to look at the question of whether the vaccine prevents transmission. Published on January 18, 2018, in the journal of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, PNAS, the study’s authors screened volunteers with confirmed cases of influenza and took breath samples. And among their findings was “an association between repeated vaccination and increased viral aerosol generation” [...]



In fact, subjects who had received the influenza vaccine in both the current and the previous season were found to shed over six times more aerosolized virus than those who did not get a flu shot during either season.




Do people who receive flu shots shed the virus more than people who don't?










share|improve this question















This 2018 Collective Evolution article claims:




Once recent study, however, did bother to look at the question of whether the vaccine prevents transmission. Published on January 18, 2018, in the journal of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, PNAS, the study’s authors screened volunteers with confirmed cases of influenza and took breath samples. And among their findings was “an association between repeated vaccination and increased viral aerosol generation” [...]



In fact, subjects who had received the influenza vaccine in both the current and the previous season were found to shed over six times more aerosolized virus than those who did not get a flu shot during either season.




Do people who receive flu shots shed the virus more than people who don't?







vaccines flu






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 days ago









DevSolar

8,83433541




8,83433541










asked Nov 14 at 14:14









Joshua Frank

42948




42948








  • 17




    what does "shed" mean in the context of a virus. I've never heard this expression
    – Michael J.
    Nov 14 at 22:53






  • 8




    @MichaelJ.: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viral_shedding
    – Oddthinking
    Nov 14 at 23:23










  • @JoelCoehoorn: Sorry, I rolled that edit back. Whether a person is shedding a virus or spreading it are two different things. If I touch six doorknobs and the other person only one, I am spreading the virus more. That's not what is meant here, the claim is clearly about shedding.
    – DevSolar
    2 days ago














  • 17




    what does "shed" mean in the context of a virus. I've never heard this expression
    – Michael J.
    Nov 14 at 22:53






  • 8




    @MichaelJ.: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viral_shedding
    – Oddthinking
    Nov 14 at 23:23










  • @JoelCoehoorn: Sorry, I rolled that edit back. Whether a person is shedding a virus or spreading it are two different things. If I touch six doorknobs and the other person only one, I am spreading the virus more. That's not what is meant here, the claim is clearly about shedding.
    – DevSolar
    2 days ago








17




17




what does "shed" mean in the context of a virus. I've never heard this expression
– Michael J.
Nov 14 at 22:53




what does "shed" mean in the context of a virus. I've never heard this expression
– Michael J.
Nov 14 at 22:53




8




8




@MichaelJ.: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viral_shedding
– Oddthinking
Nov 14 at 23:23




@MichaelJ.: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viral_shedding
– Oddthinking
Nov 14 at 23:23












@JoelCoehoorn: Sorry, I rolled that edit back. Whether a person is shedding a virus or spreading it are two different things. If I touch six doorknobs and the other person only one, I am spreading the virus more. That's not what is meant here, the claim is clearly about shedding.
– DevSolar
2 days ago




@JoelCoehoorn: Sorry, I rolled that edit back. Whether a person is shedding a virus or spreading it are two different things. If I touch six doorknobs and the other person only one, I am spreading the virus more. That's not what is meant here, the claim is clearly about shedding.
– DevSolar
2 days ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
88
down vote



accepted










A grain of truth, but not fully confirmed



The claim...




In fact, subjects who had received the influenza vaccine in both the current and the previous season were found to shed over six times more aerosolized virus than those who did not get a flu shot during either season.




...is clear enough to examine and the author has sourced it well. The source is this article: Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community



The title (boldface mine)...



"Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community"



...and the following must be noted (boldface mine):




We screened 355 volunteers with acute respiratory illness; the 178 volunteers who met enrollment criteria provided 278 visits for sample collection. We confirmed influenza infection in 156 (88%) of the enrolled participants using qRT-PCR




In other words: this study concerns people that at the time were sick with influenza.



The article then states...




Self-reported vaccination for the current season was associated with a trend (P < 0.10) toward higher viral shedding in fine-aerosol samples; vaccination with both the current and previous year’s seasonal vaccines, however, was significantly associated with greater fine-aerosol shedding in unadjusted and adjusted models (P < 0.01). In adjusted models, we observed 6.3 (95% CI 1.9–21.5) times more aerosol shedding among cases with vaccination in the current and previous season compared with having no vaccination in those two seasons. Vaccination was not associated with coarse-aerosol or NP shedding (P > 0.10). The association of vaccination and shedding was significant for influenza A (P = 0.03) but not for influenza B (P = 0.83) infections (Table S4).




So the authors of the study state that...




  • in this particular study

  • for people that were currently sick with influenza

  • for only one type of influenza

  • regarding only fine aerosols

  • where the subjects said they had been vaccinated


...they measured increased shedding. But for another type of influenza, for other types of shedding, they did not detect that, even in people that were vaccinated before. Also note that the Confidence Interval is — at least in my opinion — quite large. The increase is not actually exactly 6.3 times more for 100% certain, but instead the authors are 95% certain it is somewhere between 1.9 times and 21.5 times more shedding.



So the claim in Collective Evolution has a small grain of truth: in one study they found that for one particular type of influenza, where people had become ill in influenza, and where they had gotten ill despite vaccination, they detected a two-to-twentytwo(ish)-fold increased of shedding in fine aerosols, but not for other types of pathways for shedding. And for the other type of influenza they did not find an increase in fine aerosol shedding.



In the "discussion" section, the authors of the study therefore say the following (boldface added by me):




The association of current and prior year vaccination with increased shedding of influenza A might lead one to speculate that certain types of prior immunity promote lung inflammation, airway closure, and aerosol generation. This first observation of the phenomenon needs confirmation. If confirmed, this observation, together with recent literature suggesting reduced protection with annual vaccination, would have implications for influenza vaccination recommendations and policies.




So the claim in Collective Evolution that it has been proven that for all influensas, all types of aerosol shedding increase if the subject is vaccinated, no matter if they got ill or not, is not supported by this study. The author has ripped out a small section of the original study and extrapolated in ways that are not supported by the study.



Summary



The claim has a grain of truth, in that one study has observed this effect, for people that were vaccinated and still got ill, and only once. But the general claim — that for all influenzas, all vaccinated people increase their virus shedding six-fold — has not been proven. And it is not shown that such shedding warrants a change in policy regarding vaccination.



How did the claim become so wrong?



The claim is posted in an article on Collective Evolution.



Collective Evolution is described by RationalWiki as:




...a woo-mongering clickbait website.




The author is a guest editor that links back to World Mercury Project / Children's Health Defence. Clicking your way in there makes you find even more of that sort.



So what we have is (yet another) case of a scientific study where the participants made a measurement and reported their findings accurately, all in good faith and with rigour. And then the woo-community got wind of the study, ripped one statement out of its context, stripped away all qualifiers and caveats, generalised that statement in a way that is not supported by the scientific study, and started publishing on the Internet.



PhD Comics: Science News Cycle






share|improve this answer























  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Sklivvz
    Nov 15 at 19:41






  • 1




    I think "generalization" and "extrapolation" are gross understatements here. They started with the study in its entirety, then willfully chose to ignore and even outright contradict cautions, constraints, and limitations outlined by the study authors to make statements ranging from "fearmongering" to "patently false".
    – Doktor J
    2 days ago










  • The other issue is the study size is so small only 178 people were actually enrolled. Most scientific studies have 1000's of participants.
    – cybernard
    2 days ago










  • Seems like a classic case of p-hacking? They examined two flu variants, three different types of shedding, and whether the subjects were vaccinated this year and the previous year. There's about twenty different combinations of those criteria, and they got a significant result for one. I haven't read the study but unless it has some convincing explanation for the biological significance of having been vaccinated for the previous season, I wouldn't take it seriously.
    – Tgr
    2 days ago










  • In a way the result is just like saying that those who have an electric fence and a strong-vault and still get burgled suffer from greater damage than those who get pickpocketed because they carelessly carry their money in their pants pocket - a somewhat non-surprising statement
    – Hagen von Eitzen
    2 days ago




















up vote
1
down vote













The claim may be indeed a bit premature to confirm as either true or not true, for the general outlook. It is a robust correlational finding. Explanations of causation may follow, if confirmed. But it cannot and mustn't be dismissed out of hand.



But the finding is a valid one and the outlet from which we came here reported not that much exaggerated as perhaps to be expected, following a guild by association approach for that particular outlet!*



The original study reads in its abstract:




We provide overwhelming evidence that humans generate infectious aerosols and quantitative data to improve mathematical models of transmission and public health interventions. We show that sneezing is rare and not important for—and that coughing is not required for—influenza virus aerosolization. Our findings, that upper and lower airway infection are independent and that fine-particle exhaled aerosols reflect infection in the lung, opened a pathway for a deeper understanding of the human biology of influenza infection and transmission. Our observation of an association between repeated vaccination and increased viral aerosol generation demonstrated the power of our method, but needs confirmation.
Yan J et al.: "Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community.", Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Jan 30;115(5):1081-1086. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1716561115.




That is **Fine-aerosol viral RNA was also positively associated with having influenza vaccination for both the current and prior season. **



That are two new findings in this study:




  1. and more important, there was apparently no ned to cough and sneeze to spread infection.

  2. "The association of current and prior year vaccination with increased shedding of influenza A might lead one to speculate that certain types of prior immunity promote lung inflammation, airway closure, and aerosol generation. This first observation of the phenomenon needs confirmation. If confirmed, this observation, together with recent literature suggesting reduced protection with annual vaccination, would have implications for influenza vaccination recommendations and policies."


Although point 2 is indeed ripe with speculation, these are plausible. And there simply are no studies that would openly contradict any of its findings.



We have to keep in mind there is no "the flu vaccine" in the first place.




[Suzanne Marie Allmart: "While this study [from the claim,LLC] needs confirmation, it also happens to be the only study that has specifically looked into this question. Data showing that flu vaccination does reduce transmission and spread of the virus doesn’t exist to contradict this study.



There is evidence to support that the big picture very well may be that seasonal flu vaccines 1) make pandemic strains worse, 2) reduce illness during well-matched years, but at the expense of immunity in subsequent years 3) impair immune-functioning, leaving one more susceptible to other illnesses, including the other 84% of the 200 or so non-influenza viruses and bacteria that can cause influenza-like illness (ILI) 4) make things worse in years that negative efficacy cannot be ruled out for a given age group or vaccine type, and 5) come with risks, including but not limited to SIRVA, seizures, GBS/paralysis, narcolepsy and potentially death. The safety of the flu vaccine one year does not guarantee its safety the next.

"In Summary of CDC Flu Vaccine Effectiveness Estimates, 2004–2018 (and other studies)", Medium, March 2018.]2




Other authorities evaluate the claim as such:




Ashley York: "Breathing alone may spread the flu", Nature Reviews Microbiology volume 16, page 123 (2018):
Influenza viruses have been proposed to spread through aerosols, but the importance of this mode of transmission between humans is unclear. Now, Yan et al. provide evidence that humans generate infectious aerosols by characterizing the virus in exhaled breath during natural breathing, prompted speech, coughing and sneezing. By analysing paired nasopharyngeal and breath samples from infected individuals, the authors observed that a significant proportion of the infected individuals shed infectious virus in aerosol particles that have the potential to spread by aerosol transmission (≤5 μm). Surprisingly, coughing and sneezing was not necessary for the generation of infectious aerosols, and sneezing did not increase the amount of viral RNA in aerosol particles. The authors argue that these findings could be used to improve models of airborne influenza virus transmission.



Richard T. Ellison III, MD: "Airborne Influenza Transmission", NEJM Journal Watch, 2018:

Infectious virus was present in 89% of the NP samples and 39% of fine aerosol samples. Geometric mean RNA copy numbers for fine and coarse aerosol samples were 3.8×104 and 1.2×104 per 30 minutes, respectively, compared with 8.2×108 per NP swab. The amount of viral shedding in fine aerosol samples declined with the number of days after symptom onset and was increased for males and with coughing, although shedding occurred without coughing or sneezing. Self-reported flu vaccination in both the 2012–2013 and previous flu seasons was associated with fine aerosol shedding but not NP or coarse aerosol shedding.



COMMENT

This study supplements prior evidence supporting the risk for influenza transmission by fine aerosols and will renew discussions regarding the optimal approach to protecting healthcare providers from acquiring the virus (NEJM JW Infect Dis Nov 2009 and JAMA 2009; 302:1865). The authors acknowledge that the unexpected observation of increased fine aerosol shedding in vaccine recipients requires confirmation in additional studies.




And even more interesting a BMJ article trying to make sense of this:




“Self-reported vaccination for the current season was associated with a trend (P < 0.10) toward higher viral shedding in fine-aerosol samples; vaccination with both the current and previous year’s seasonal vaccines, however, was significantly associated with greater fine-aerosol shedding in unadjusted and adjusted models (P < 0.01). In adjusted models, we observed 6.3 (95% CI 1.9–21.5) times more aerosol shedding among cases with vaccination in the current and previous season compared with having no vaccination in those two seasons.” [7⁠]



This result makes a lot of sense. When you have influenza virus allergy and are infected, you have more mast cell degranulation, more histamine, more mucus, more sneezing, more viral shedding.



Increased hospitalization rates have been observed in asthma patients that have received the influenza vaccine. Again, this is as predicted because asthma patients are likely to produce stronger IgE responses to the viral proteins upon vaccination. On subsequent virus exposure, they can be expected to develop severe IgE mediated asthma.



MEPs devise strategy to tackle vaccine hesitancy among public, BMJ 2018; 360 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k1378 (Published 23 March 2018) BMJ 2018;360:k1378




In fact, there are more than a few prior indicators that point into the same direction:




Lin Edwards: "Vaccination may make flu worse if exposed to a second strain" Medical Xpress, 30 Aug 2013



Ed susman: "Ferrets Keep Flu Vaccine/H1N1 Pot Boiling", MedPage Today, 2012:
The vaccinated ferrets also accumulated significantly greater lung virus titers -- 4.96 plot forming units/ml versus 4.23 pfu/ml (P=0.01).
Skowronski told MedPage Today that their work attempted to verify controversial findings that the seasonal flu vaccination resulted in more severe acute symptoms if that individual was infected with pandemic H1N1.



Naveed Z. Janjua et al.: "Seasonal Influenza Vaccine and Increased Risk of Pandemic A/H1N1-Related Illness: First Detection of the Association in British Columbia, Canada", Clinical Infectious Diseases, Volume 51, Issue 9, 1 November 2010, Pages 1017–1027, https://doi.org/10.1086/656586



Annual vaccination may hamper the development of cross-reactive immunity against influenza A viruses of novel subtypes, that would otherwise be induced by natural infection.”



“Studies of repeated vaccination across multiple seasons suggest that vaccine effectiveness may be influenced by more than one prior season. In immunogenicity studies, repeated vaccination blunts the hemagglutinin antibody response, particularly for H3N2.”







share|improve this answer































    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    88
    down vote



    accepted










    A grain of truth, but not fully confirmed



    The claim...




    In fact, subjects who had received the influenza vaccine in both the current and the previous season were found to shed over six times more aerosolized virus than those who did not get a flu shot during either season.




    ...is clear enough to examine and the author has sourced it well. The source is this article: Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community



    The title (boldface mine)...



    "Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community"



    ...and the following must be noted (boldface mine):




    We screened 355 volunteers with acute respiratory illness; the 178 volunteers who met enrollment criteria provided 278 visits for sample collection. We confirmed influenza infection in 156 (88%) of the enrolled participants using qRT-PCR




    In other words: this study concerns people that at the time were sick with influenza.



    The article then states...




    Self-reported vaccination for the current season was associated with a trend (P < 0.10) toward higher viral shedding in fine-aerosol samples; vaccination with both the current and previous year’s seasonal vaccines, however, was significantly associated with greater fine-aerosol shedding in unadjusted and adjusted models (P < 0.01). In adjusted models, we observed 6.3 (95% CI 1.9–21.5) times more aerosol shedding among cases with vaccination in the current and previous season compared with having no vaccination in those two seasons. Vaccination was not associated with coarse-aerosol or NP shedding (P > 0.10). The association of vaccination and shedding was significant for influenza A (P = 0.03) but not for influenza B (P = 0.83) infections (Table S4).




    So the authors of the study state that...




    • in this particular study

    • for people that were currently sick with influenza

    • for only one type of influenza

    • regarding only fine aerosols

    • where the subjects said they had been vaccinated


    ...they measured increased shedding. But for another type of influenza, for other types of shedding, they did not detect that, even in people that were vaccinated before. Also note that the Confidence Interval is — at least in my opinion — quite large. The increase is not actually exactly 6.3 times more for 100% certain, but instead the authors are 95% certain it is somewhere between 1.9 times and 21.5 times more shedding.



    So the claim in Collective Evolution has a small grain of truth: in one study they found that for one particular type of influenza, where people had become ill in influenza, and where they had gotten ill despite vaccination, they detected a two-to-twentytwo(ish)-fold increased of shedding in fine aerosols, but not for other types of pathways for shedding. And for the other type of influenza they did not find an increase in fine aerosol shedding.



    In the "discussion" section, the authors of the study therefore say the following (boldface added by me):




    The association of current and prior year vaccination with increased shedding of influenza A might lead one to speculate that certain types of prior immunity promote lung inflammation, airway closure, and aerosol generation. This first observation of the phenomenon needs confirmation. If confirmed, this observation, together with recent literature suggesting reduced protection with annual vaccination, would have implications for influenza vaccination recommendations and policies.




    So the claim in Collective Evolution that it has been proven that for all influensas, all types of aerosol shedding increase if the subject is vaccinated, no matter if they got ill or not, is not supported by this study. The author has ripped out a small section of the original study and extrapolated in ways that are not supported by the study.



    Summary



    The claim has a grain of truth, in that one study has observed this effect, for people that were vaccinated and still got ill, and only once. But the general claim — that for all influenzas, all vaccinated people increase their virus shedding six-fold — has not been proven. And it is not shown that such shedding warrants a change in policy regarding vaccination.



    How did the claim become so wrong?



    The claim is posted in an article on Collective Evolution.



    Collective Evolution is described by RationalWiki as:




    ...a woo-mongering clickbait website.




    The author is a guest editor that links back to World Mercury Project / Children's Health Defence. Clicking your way in there makes you find even more of that sort.



    So what we have is (yet another) case of a scientific study where the participants made a measurement and reported their findings accurately, all in good faith and with rigour. And then the woo-community got wind of the study, ripped one statement out of its context, stripped away all qualifiers and caveats, generalised that statement in a way that is not supported by the scientific study, and started publishing on the Internet.



    PhD Comics: Science News Cycle






    share|improve this answer























    • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
      – Sklivvz
      Nov 15 at 19:41






    • 1




      I think "generalization" and "extrapolation" are gross understatements here. They started with the study in its entirety, then willfully chose to ignore and even outright contradict cautions, constraints, and limitations outlined by the study authors to make statements ranging from "fearmongering" to "patently false".
      – Doktor J
      2 days ago










    • The other issue is the study size is so small only 178 people were actually enrolled. Most scientific studies have 1000's of participants.
      – cybernard
      2 days ago










    • Seems like a classic case of p-hacking? They examined two flu variants, three different types of shedding, and whether the subjects were vaccinated this year and the previous year. There's about twenty different combinations of those criteria, and they got a significant result for one. I haven't read the study but unless it has some convincing explanation for the biological significance of having been vaccinated for the previous season, I wouldn't take it seriously.
      – Tgr
      2 days ago










    • In a way the result is just like saying that those who have an electric fence and a strong-vault and still get burgled suffer from greater damage than those who get pickpocketed because they carelessly carry their money in their pants pocket - a somewhat non-surprising statement
      – Hagen von Eitzen
      2 days ago

















    up vote
    88
    down vote



    accepted










    A grain of truth, but not fully confirmed



    The claim...




    In fact, subjects who had received the influenza vaccine in both the current and the previous season were found to shed over six times more aerosolized virus than those who did not get a flu shot during either season.




    ...is clear enough to examine and the author has sourced it well. The source is this article: Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community



    The title (boldface mine)...



    "Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community"



    ...and the following must be noted (boldface mine):




    We screened 355 volunteers with acute respiratory illness; the 178 volunteers who met enrollment criteria provided 278 visits for sample collection. We confirmed influenza infection in 156 (88%) of the enrolled participants using qRT-PCR




    In other words: this study concerns people that at the time were sick with influenza.



    The article then states...




    Self-reported vaccination for the current season was associated with a trend (P < 0.10) toward higher viral shedding in fine-aerosol samples; vaccination with both the current and previous year’s seasonal vaccines, however, was significantly associated with greater fine-aerosol shedding in unadjusted and adjusted models (P < 0.01). In adjusted models, we observed 6.3 (95% CI 1.9–21.5) times more aerosol shedding among cases with vaccination in the current and previous season compared with having no vaccination in those two seasons. Vaccination was not associated with coarse-aerosol or NP shedding (P > 0.10). The association of vaccination and shedding was significant for influenza A (P = 0.03) but not for influenza B (P = 0.83) infections (Table S4).




    So the authors of the study state that...




    • in this particular study

    • for people that were currently sick with influenza

    • for only one type of influenza

    • regarding only fine aerosols

    • where the subjects said they had been vaccinated


    ...they measured increased shedding. But for another type of influenza, for other types of shedding, they did not detect that, even in people that were vaccinated before. Also note that the Confidence Interval is — at least in my opinion — quite large. The increase is not actually exactly 6.3 times more for 100% certain, but instead the authors are 95% certain it is somewhere between 1.9 times and 21.5 times more shedding.



    So the claim in Collective Evolution has a small grain of truth: in one study they found that for one particular type of influenza, where people had become ill in influenza, and where they had gotten ill despite vaccination, they detected a two-to-twentytwo(ish)-fold increased of shedding in fine aerosols, but not for other types of pathways for shedding. And for the other type of influenza they did not find an increase in fine aerosol shedding.



    In the "discussion" section, the authors of the study therefore say the following (boldface added by me):




    The association of current and prior year vaccination with increased shedding of influenza A might lead one to speculate that certain types of prior immunity promote lung inflammation, airway closure, and aerosol generation. This first observation of the phenomenon needs confirmation. If confirmed, this observation, together with recent literature suggesting reduced protection with annual vaccination, would have implications for influenza vaccination recommendations and policies.




    So the claim in Collective Evolution that it has been proven that for all influensas, all types of aerosol shedding increase if the subject is vaccinated, no matter if they got ill or not, is not supported by this study. The author has ripped out a small section of the original study and extrapolated in ways that are not supported by the study.



    Summary



    The claim has a grain of truth, in that one study has observed this effect, for people that were vaccinated and still got ill, and only once. But the general claim — that for all influenzas, all vaccinated people increase their virus shedding six-fold — has not been proven. And it is not shown that such shedding warrants a change in policy regarding vaccination.



    How did the claim become so wrong?



    The claim is posted in an article on Collective Evolution.



    Collective Evolution is described by RationalWiki as:




    ...a woo-mongering clickbait website.




    The author is a guest editor that links back to World Mercury Project / Children's Health Defence. Clicking your way in there makes you find even more of that sort.



    So what we have is (yet another) case of a scientific study where the participants made a measurement and reported their findings accurately, all in good faith and with rigour. And then the woo-community got wind of the study, ripped one statement out of its context, stripped away all qualifiers and caveats, generalised that statement in a way that is not supported by the scientific study, and started publishing on the Internet.



    PhD Comics: Science News Cycle






    share|improve this answer























    • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
      – Sklivvz
      Nov 15 at 19:41






    • 1




      I think "generalization" and "extrapolation" are gross understatements here. They started with the study in its entirety, then willfully chose to ignore and even outright contradict cautions, constraints, and limitations outlined by the study authors to make statements ranging from "fearmongering" to "patently false".
      – Doktor J
      2 days ago










    • The other issue is the study size is so small only 178 people were actually enrolled. Most scientific studies have 1000's of participants.
      – cybernard
      2 days ago










    • Seems like a classic case of p-hacking? They examined two flu variants, three different types of shedding, and whether the subjects were vaccinated this year and the previous year. There's about twenty different combinations of those criteria, and they got a significant result for one. I haven't read the study but unless it has some convincing explanation for the biological significance of having been vaccinated for the previous season, I wouldn't take it seriously.
      – Tgr
      2 days ago










    • In a way the result is just like saying that those who have an electric fence and a strong-vault and still get burgled suffer from greater damage than those who get pickpocketed because they carelessly carry their money in their pants pocket - a somewhat non-surprising statement
      – Hagen von Eitzen
      2 days ago















    up vote
    88
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    88
    down vote



    accepted






    A grain of truth, but not fully confirmed



    The claim...




    In fact, subjects who had received the influenza vaccine in both the current and the previous season were found to shed over six times more aerosolized virus than those who did not get a flu shot during either season.




    ...is clear enough to examine and the author has sourced it well. The source is this article: Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community



    The title (boldface mine)...



    "Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community"



    ...and the following must be noted (boldface mine):




    We screened 355 volunteers with acute respiratory illness; the 178 volunteers who met enrollment criteria provided 278 visits for sample collection. We confirmed influenza infection in 156 (88%) of the enrolled participants using qRT-PCR




    In other words: this study concerns people that at the time were sick with influenza.



    The article then states...




    Self-reported vaccination for the current season was associated with a trend (P < 0.10) toward higher viral shedding in fine-aerosol samples; vaccination with both the current and previous year’s seasonal vaccines, however, was significantly associated with greater fine-aerosol shedding in unadjusted and adjusted models (P < 0.01). In adjusted models, we observed 6.3 (95% CI 1.9–21.5) times more aerosol shedding among cases with vaccination in the current and previous season compared with having no vaccination in those two seasons. Vaccination was not associated with coarse-aerosol or NP shedding (P > 0.10). The association of vaccination and shedding was significant for influenza A (P = 0.03) but not for influenza B (P = 0.83) infections (Table S4).




    So the authors of the study state that...




    • in this particular study

    • for people that were currently sick with influenza

    • for only one type of influenza

    • regarding only fine aerosols

    • where the subjects said they had been vaccinated


    ...they measured increased shedding. But for another type of influenza, for other types of shedding, they did not detect that, even in people that were vaccinated before. Also note that the Confidence Interval is — at least in my opinion — quite large. The increase is not actually exactly 6.3 times more for 100% certain, but instead the authors are 95% certain it is somewhere between 1.9 times and 21.5 times more shedding.



    So the claim in Collective Evolution has a small grain of truth: in one study they found that for one particular type of influenza, where people had become ill in influenza, and where they had gotten ill despite vaccination, they detected a two-to-twentytwo(ish)-fold increased of shedding in fine aerosols, but not for other types of pathways for shedding. And for the other type of influenza they did not find an increase in fine aerosol shedding.



    In the "discussion" section, the authors of the study therefore say the following (boldface added by me):




    The association of current and prior year vaccination with increased shedding of influenza A might lead one to speculate that certain types of prior immunity promote lung inflammation, airway closure, and aerosol generation. This first observation of the phenomenon needs confirmation. If confirmed, this observation, together with recent literature suggesting reduced protection with annual vaccination, would have implications for influenza vaccination recommendations and policies.




    So the claim in Collective Evolution that it has been proven that for all influensas, all types of aerosol shedding increase if the subject is vaccinated, no matter if they got ill or not, is not supported by this study. The author has ripped out a small section of the original study and extrapolated in ways that are not supported by the study.



    Summary



    The claim has a grain of truth, in that one study has observed this effect, for people that were vaccinated and still got ill, and only once. But the general claim — that for all influenzas, all vaccinated people increase their virus shedding six-fold — has not been proven. And it is not shown that such shedding warrants a change in policy regarding vaccination.



    How did the claim become so wrong?



    The claim is posted in an article on Collective Evolution.



    Collective Evolution is described by RationalWiki as:




    ...a woo-mongering clickbait website.




    The author is a guest editor that links back to World Mercury Project / Children's Health Defence. Clicking your way in there makes you find even more of that sort.



    So what we have is (yet another) case of a scientific study where the participants made a measurement and reported their findings accurately, all in good faith and with rigour. And then the woo-community got wind of the study, ripped one statement out of its context, stripped away all qualifiers and caveats, generalised that statement in a way that is not supported by the scientific study, and started publishing on the Internet.



    PhD Comics: Science News Cycle






    share|improve this answer














    A grain of truth, but not fully confirmed



    The claim...




    In fact, subjects who had received the influenza vaccine in both the current and the previous season were found to shed over six times more aerosolized virus than those who did not get a flu shot during either season.




    ...is clear enough to examine and the author has sourced it well. The source is this article: Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community



    The title (boldface mine)...



    "Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community"



    ...and the following must be noted (boldface mine):




    We screened 355 volunteers with acute respiratory illness; the 178 volunteers who met enrollment criteria provided 278 visits for sample collection. We confirmed influenza infection in 156 (88%) of the enrolled participants using qRT-PCR




    In other words: this study concerns people that at the time were sick with influenza.



    The article then states...




    Self-reported vaccination for the current season was associated with a trend (P < 0.10) toward higher viral shedding in fine-aerosol samples; vaccination with both the current and previous year’s seasonal vaccines, however, was significantly associated with greater fine-aerosol shedding in unadjusted and adjusted models (P < 0.01). In adjusted models, we observed 6.3 (95% CI 1.9–21.5) times more aerosol shedding among cases with vaccination in the current and previous season compared with having no vaccination in those two seasons. Vaccination was not associated with coarse-aerosol or NP shedding (P > 0.10). The association of vaccination and shedding was significant for influenza A (P = 0.03) but not for influenza B (P = 0.83) infections (Table S4).




    So the authors of the study state that...




    • in this particular study

    • for people that were currently sick with influenza

    • for only one type of influenza

    • regarding only fine aerosols

    • where the subjects said they had been vaccinated


    ...they measured increased shedding. But for another type of influenza, for other types of shedding, they did not detect that, even in people that were vaccinated before. Also note that the Confidence Interval is — at least in my opinion — quite large. The increase is not actually exactly 6.3 times more for 100% certain, but instead the authors are 95% certain it is somewhere between 1.9 times and 21.5 times more shedding.



    So the claim in Collective Evolution has a small grain of truth: in one study they found that for one particular type of influenza, where people had become ill in influenza, and where they had gotten ill despite vaccination, they detected a two-to-twentytwo(ish)-fold increased of shedding in fine aerosols, but not for other types of pathways for shedding. And for the other type of influenza they did not find an increase in fine aerosol shedding.



    In the "discussion" section, the authors of the study therefore say the following (boldface added by me):




    The association of current and prior year vaccination with increased shedding of influenza A might lead one to speculate that certain types of prior immunity promote lung inflammation, airway closure, and aerosol generation. This first observation of the phenomenon needs confirmation. If confirmed, this observation, together with recent literature suggesting reduced protection with annual vaccination, would have implications for influenza vaccination recommendations and policies.




    So the claim in Collective Evolution that it has been proven that for all influensas, all types of aerosol shedding increase if the subject is vaccinated, no matter if they got ill or not, is not supported by this study. The author has ripped out a small section of the original study and extrapolated in ways that are not supported by the study.



    Summary



    The claim has a grain of truth, in that one study has observed this effect, for people that were vaccinated and still got ill, and only once. But the general claim — that for all influenzas, all vaccinated people increase their virus shedding six-fold — has not been proven. And it is not shown that such shedding warrants a change in policy regarding vaccination.



    How did the claim become so wrong?



    The claim is posted in an article on Collective Evolution.



    Collective Evolution is described by RationalWiki as:




    ...a woo-mongering clickbait website.




    The author is a guest editor that links back to World Mercury Project / Children's Health Defence. Clicking your way in there makes you find even more of that sort.



    So what we have is (yet another) case of a scientific study where the participants made a measurement and reported their findings accurately, all in good faith and with rigour. And then the woo-community got wind of the study, ripped one statement out of its context, stripped away all qualifiers and caveats, generalised that statement in a way that is not supported by the scientific study, and started publishing on the Internet.



    PhD Comics: Science News Cycle







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 2 days ago

























    answered Nov 14 at 15:40









    MichaelK

    7,18633539




    7,18633539












    • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
      – Sklivvz
      Nov 15 at 19:41






    • 1




      I think "generalization" and "extrapolation" are gross understatements here. They started with the study in its entirety, then willfully chose to ignore and even outright contradict cautions, constraints, and limitations outlined by the study authors to make statements ranging from "fearmongering" to "patently false".
      – Doktor J
      2 days ago










    • The other issue is the study size is so small only 178 people were actually enrolled. Most scientific studies have 1000's of participants.
      – cybernard
      2 days ago










    • Seems like a classic case of p-hacking? They examined two flu variants, three different types of shedding, and whether the subjects were vaccinated this year and the previous year. There's about twenty different combinations of those criteria, and they got a significant result for one. I haven't read the study but unless it has some convincing explanation for the biological significance of having been vaccinated for the previous season, I wouldn't take it seriously.
      – Tgr
      2 days ago










    • In a way the result is just like saying that those who have an electric fence and a strong-vault and still get burgled suffer from greater damage than those who get pickpocketed because they carelessly carry their money in their pants pocket - a somewhat non-surprising statement
      – Hagen von Eitzen
      2 days ago




















    • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
      – Sklivvz
      Nov 15 at 19:41






    • 1




      I think "generalization" and "extrapolation" are gross understatements here. They started with the study in its entirety, then willfully chose to ignore and even outright contradict cautions, constraints, and limitations outlined by the study authors to make statements ranging from "fearmongering" to "patently false".
      – Doktor J
      2 days ago










    • The other issue is the study size is so small only 178 people were actually enrolled. Most scientific studies have 1000's of participants.
      – cybernard
      2 days ago










    • Seems like a classic case of p-hacking? They examined two flu variants, three different types of shedding, and whether the subjects were vaccinated this year and the previous year. There's about twenty different combinations of those criteria, and they got a significant result for one. I haven't read the study but unless it has some convincing explanation for the biological significance of having been vaccinated for the previous season, I wouldn't take it seriously.
      – Tgr
      2 days ago










    • In a way the result is just like saying that those who have an electric fence and a strong-vault and still get burgled suffer from greater damage than those who get pickpocketed because they carelessly carry their money in their pants pocket - a somewhat non-surprising statement
      – Hagen von Eitzen
      2 days ago


















    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Sklivvz
    Nov 15 at 19:41




    Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Sklivvz
    Nov 15 at 19:41




    1




    1




    I think "generalization" and "extrapolation" are gross understatements here. They started with the study in its entirety, then willfully chose to ignore and even outright contradict cautions, constraints, and limitations outlined by the study authors to make statements ranging from "fearmongering" to "patently false".
    – Doktor J
    2 days ago




    I think "generalization" and "extrapolation" are gross understatements here. They started with the study in its entirety, then willfully chose to ignore and even outright contradict cautions, constraints, and limitations outlined by the study authors to make statements ranging from "fearmongering" to "patently false".
    – Doktor J
    2 days ago












    The other issue is the study size is so small only 178 people were actually enrolled. Most scientific studies have 1000's of participants.
    – cybernard
    2 days ago




    The other issue is the study size is so small only 178 people were actually enrolled. Most scientific studies have 1000's of participants.
    – cybernard
    2 days ago












    Seems like a classic case of p-hacking? They examined two flu variants, three different types of shedding, and whether the subjects were vaccinated this year and the previous year. There's about twenty different combinations of those criteria, and they got a significant result for one. I haven't read the study but unless it has some convincing explanation for the biological significance of having been vaccinated for the previous season, I wouldn't take it seriously.
    – Tgr
    2 days ago




    Seems like a classic case of p-hacking? They examined two flu variants, three different types of shedding, and whether the subjects were vaccinated this year and the previous year. There's about twenty different combinations of those criteria, and they got a significant result for one. I haven't read the study but unless it has some convincing explanation for the biological significance of having been vaccinated for the previous season, I wouldn't take it seriously.
    – Tgr
    2 days ago












    In a way the result is just like saying that those who have an electric fence and a strong-vault and still get burgled suffer from greater damage than those who get pickpocketed because they carelessly carry their money in their pants pocket - a somewhat non-surprising statement
    – Hagen von Eitzen
    2 days ago






    In a way the result is just like saying that those who have an electric fence and a strong-vault and still get burgled suffer from greater damage than those who get pickpocketed because they carelessly carry their money in their pants pocket - a somewhat non-surprising statement
    – Hagen von Eitzen
    2 days ago












    up vote
    1
    down vote













    The claim may be indeed a bit premature to confirm as either true or not true, for the general outlook. It is a robust correlational finding. Explanations of causation may follow, if confirmed. But it cannot and mustn't be dismissed out of hand.



    But the finding is a valid one and the outlet from which we came here reported not that much exaggerated as perhaps to be expected, following a guild by association approach for that particular outlet!*



    The original study reads in its abstract:




    We provide overwhelming evidence that humans generate infectious aerosols and quantitative data to improve mathematical models of transmission and public health interventions. We show that sneezing is rare and not important for—and that coughing is not required for—influenza virus aerosolization. Our findings, that upper and lower airway infection are independent and that fine-particle exhaled aerosols reflect infection in the lung, opened a pathway for a deeper understanding of the human biology of influenza infection and transmission. Our observation of an association between repeated vaccination and increased viral aerosol generation demonstrated the power of our method, but needs confirmation.
    Yan J et al.: "Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community.", Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Jan 30;115(5):1081-1086. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1716561115.




    That is **Fine-aerosol viral RNA was also positively associated with having influenza vaccination for both the current and prior season. **



    That are two new findings in this study:




    1. and more important, there was apparently no ned to cough and sneeze to spread infection.

    2. "The association of current and prior year vaccination with increased shedding of influenza A might lead one to speculate that certain types of prior immunity promote lung inflammation, airway closure, and aerosol generation. This first observation of the phenomenon needs confirmation. If confirmed, this observation, together with recent literature suggesting reduced protection with annual vaccination, would have implications for influenza vaccination recommendations and policies."


    Although point 2 is indeed ripe with speculation, these are plausible. And there simply are no studies that would openly contradict any of its findings.



    We have to keep in mind there is no "the flu vaccine" in the first place.




    [Suzanne Marie Allmart: "While this study [from the claim,LLC] needs confirmation, it also happens to be the only study that has specifically looked into this question. Data showing that flu vaccination does reduce transmission and spread of the virus doesn’t exist to contradict this study.



    There is evidence to support that the big picture very well may be that seasonal flu vaccines 1) make pandemic strains worse, 2) reduce illness during well-matched years, but at the expense of immunity in subsequent years 3) impair immune-functioning, leaving one more susceptible to other illnesses, including the other 84% of the 200 or so non-influenza viruses and bacteria that can cause influenza-like illness (ILI) 4) make things worse in years that negative efficacy cannot be ruled out for a given age group or vaccine type, and 5) come with risks, including but not limited to SIRVA, seizures, GBS/paralysis, narcolepsy and potentially death. The safety of the flu vaccine one year does not guarantee its safety the next.

    "In Summary of CDC Flu Vaccine Effectiveness Estimates, 2004–2018 (and other studies)", Medium, March 2018.]2




    Other authorities evaluate the claim as such:




    Ashley York: "Breathing alone may spread the flu", Nature Reviews Microbiology volume 16, page 123 (2018):
    Influenza viruses have been proposed to spread through aerosols, but the importance of this mode of transmission between humans is unclear. Now, Yan et al. provide evidence that humans generate infectious aerosols by characterizing the virus in exhaled breath during natural breathing, prompted speech, coughing and sneezing. By analysing paired nasopharyngeal and breath samples from infected individuals, the authors observed that a significant proportion of the infected individuals shed infectious virus in aerosol particles that have the potential to spread by aerosol transmission (≤5 μm). Surprisingly, coughing and sneezing was not necessary for the generation of infectious aerosols, and sneezing did not increase the amount of viral RNA in aerosol particles. The authors argue that these findings could be used to improve models of airborne influenza virus transmission.



    Richard T. Ellison III, MD: "Airborne Influenza Transmission", NEJM Journal Watch, 2018:

    Infectious virus was present in 89% of the NP samples and 39% of fine aerosol samples. Geometric mean RNA copy numbers for fine and coarse aerosol samples were 3.8×104 and 1.2×104 per 30 minutes, respectively, compared with 8.2×108 per NP swab. The amount of viral shedding in fine aerosol samples declined with the number of days after symptom onset and was increased for males and with coughing, although shedding occurred without coughing or sneezing. Self-reported flu vaccination in both the 2012–2013 and previous flu seasons was associated with fine aerosol shedding but not NP or coarse aerosol shedding.



    COMMENT

    This study supplements prior evidence supporting the risk for influenza transmission by fine aerosols and will renew discussions regarding the optimal approach to protecting healthcare providers from acquiring the virus (NEJM JW Infect Dis Nov 2009 and JAMA 2009; 302:1865). The authors acknowledge that the unexpected observation of increased fine aerosol shedding in vaccine recipients requires confirmation in additional studies.




    And even more interesting a BMJ article trying to make sense of this:




    “Self-reported vaccination for the current season was associated with a trend (P < 0.10) toward higher viral shedding in fine-aerosol samples; vaccination with both the current and previous year’s seasonal vaccines, however, was significantly associated with greater fine-aerosol shedding in unadjusted and adjusted models (P < 0.01). In adjusted models, we observed 6.3 (95% CI 1.9–21.5) times more aerosol shedding among cases with vaccination in the current and previous season compared with having no vaccination in those two seasons.” [7⁠]



    This result makes a lot of sense. When you have influenza virus allergy and are infected, you have more mast cell degranulation, more histamine, more mucus, more sneezing, more viral shedding.



    Increased hospitalization rates have been observed in asthma patients that have received the influenza vaccine. Again, this is as predicted because asthma patients are likely to produce stronger IgE responses to the viral proteins upon vaccination. On subsequent virus exposure, they can be expected to develop severe IgE mediated asthma.



    MEPs devise strategy to tackle vaccine hesitancy among public, BMJ 2018; 360 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k1378 (Published 23 March 2018) BMJ 2018;360:k1378




    In fact, there are more than a few prior indicators that point into the same direction:




    Lin Edwards: "Vaccination may make flu worse if exposed to a second strain" Medical Xpress, 30 Aug 2013



    Ed susman: "Ferrets Keep Flu Vaccine/H1N1 Pot Boiling", MedPage Today, 2012:
    The vaccinated ferrets also accumulated significantly greater lung virus titers -- 4.96 plot forming units/ml versus 4.23 pfu/ml (P=0.01).
    Skowronski told MedPage Today that their work attempted to verify controversial findings that the seasonal flu vaccination resulted in more severe acute symptoms if that individual was infected with pandemic H1N1.



    Naveed Z. Janjua et al.: "Seasonal Influenza Vaccine and Increased Risk of Pandemic A/H1N1-Related Illness: First Detection of the Association in British Columbia, Canada", Clinical Infectious Diseases, Volume 51, Issue 9, 1 November 2010, Pages 1017–1027, https://doi.org/10.1086/656586



    Annual vaccination may hamper the development of cross-reactive immunity against influenza A viruses of novel subtypes, that would otherwise be induced by natural infection.”



    “Studies of repeated vaccination across multiple seasons suggest that vaccine effectiveness may be influenced by more than one prior season. In immunogenicity studies, repeated vaccination blunts the hemagglutinin antibody response, particularly for H3N2.”







    share|improve this answer



























      up vote
      1
      down vote













      The claim may be indeed a bit premature to confirm as either true or not true, for the general outlook. It is a robust correlational finding. Explanations of causation may follow, if confirmed. But it cannot and mustn't be dismissed out of hand.



      But the finding is a valid one and the outlet from which we came here reported not that much exaggerated as perhaps to be expected, following a guild by association approach for that particular outlet!*



      The original study reads in its abstract:




      We provide overwhelming evidence that humans generate infectious aerosols and quantitative data to improve mathematical models of transmission and public health interventions. We show that sneezing is rare and not important for—and that coughing is not required for—influenza virus aerosolization. Our findings, that upper and lower airway infection are independent and that fine-particle exhaled aerosols reflect infection in the lung, opened a pathway for a deeper understanding of the human biology of influenza infection and transmission. Our observation of an association between repeated vaccination and increased viral aerosol generation demonstrated the power of our method, but needs confirmation.
      Yan J et al.: "Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community.", Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Jan 30;115(5):1081-1086. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1716561115.




      That is **Fine-aerosol viral RNA was also positively associated with having influenza vaccination for both the current and prior season. **



      That are two new findings in this study:




      1. and more important, there was apparently no ned to cough and sneeze to spread infection.

      2. "The association of current and prior year vaccination with increased shedding of influenza A might lead one to speculate that certain types of prior immunity promote lung inflammation, airway closure, and aerosol generation. This first observation of the phenomenon needs confirmation. If confirmed, this observation, together with recent literature suggesting reduced protection with annual vaccination, would have implications for influenza vaccination recommendations and policies."


      Although point 2 is indeed ripe with speculation, these are plausible. And there simply are no studies that would openly contradict any of its findings.



      We have to keep in mind there is no "the flu vaccine" in the first place.




      [Suzanne Marie Allmart: "While this study [from the claim,LLC] needs confirmation, it also happens to be the only study that has specifically looked into this question. Data showing that flu vaccination does reduce transmission and spread of the virus doesn’t exist to contradict this study.



      There is evidence to support that the big picture very well may be that seasonal flu vaccines 1) make pandemic strains worse, 2) reduce illness during well-matched years, but at the expense of immunity in subsequent years 3) impair immune-functioning, leaving one more susceptible to other illnesses, including the other 84% of the 200 or so non-influenza viruses and bacteria that can cause influenza-like illness (ILI) 4) make things worse in years that negative efficacy cannot be ruled out for a given age group or vaccine type, and 5) come with risks, including but not limited to SIRVA, seizures, GBS/paralysis, narcolepsy and potentially death. The safety of the flu vaccine one year does not guarantee its safety the next.

      "In Summary of CDC Flu Vaccine Effectiveness Estimates, 2004–2018 (and other studies)", Medium, March 2018.]2




      Other authorities evaluate the claim as such:




      Ashley York: "Breathing alone may spread the flu", Nature Reviews Microbiology volume 16, page 123 (2018):
      Influenza viruses have been proposed to spread through aerosols, but the importance of this mode of transmission between humans is unclear. Now, Yan et al. provide evidence that humans generate infectious aerosols by characterizing the virus in exhaled breath during natural breathing, prompted speech, coughing and sneezing. By analysing paired nasopharyngeal and breath samples from infected individuals, the authors observed that a significant proportion of the infected individuals shed infectious virus in aerosol particles that have the potential to spread by aerosol transmission (≤5 μm). Surprisingly, coughing and sneezing was not necessary for the generation of infectious aerosols, and sneezing did not increase the amount of viral RNA in aerosol particles. The authors argue that these findings could be used to improve models of airborne influenza virus transmission.



      Richard T. Ellison III, MD: "Airborne Influenza Transmission", NEJM Journal Watch, 2018:

      Infectious virus was present in 89% of the NP samples and 39% of fine aerosol samples. Geometric mean RNA copy numbers for fine and coarse aerosol samples were 3.8×104 and 1.2×104 per 30 minutes, respectively, compared with 8.2×108 per NP swab. The amount of viral shedding in fine aerosol samples declined with the number of days after symptom onset and was increased for males and with coughing, although shedding occurred without coughing or sneezing. Self-reported flu vaccination in both the 2012–2013 and previous flu seasons was associated with fine aerosol shedding but not NP or coarse aerosol shedding.



      COMMENT

      This study supplements prior evidence supporting the risk for influenza transmission by fine aerosols and will renew discussions regarding the optimal approach to protecting healthcare providers from acquiring the virus (NEJM JW Infect Dis Nov 2009 and JAMA 2009; 302:1865). The authors acknowledge that the unexpected observation of increased fine aerosol shedding in vaccine recipients requires confirmation in additional studies.




      And even more interesting a BMJ article trying to make sense of this:




      “Self-reported vaccination for the current season was associated with a trend (P < 0.10) toward higher viral shedding in fine-aerosol samples; vaccination with both the current and previous year’s seasonal vaccines, however, was significantly associated with greater fine-aerosol shedding in unadjusted and adjusted models (P < 0.01). In adjusted models, we observed 6.3 (95% CI 1.9–21.5) times more aerosol shedding among cases with vaccination in the current and previous season compared with having no vaccination in those two seasons.” [7⁠]



      This result makes a lot of sense. When you have influenza virus allergy and are infected, you have more mast cell degranulation, more histamine, more mucus, more sneezing, more viral shedding.



      Increased hospitalization rates have been observed in asthma patients that have received the influenza vaccine. Again, this is as predicted because asthma patients are likely to produce stronger IgE responses to the viral proteins upon vaccination. On subsequent virus exposure, they can be expected to develop severe IgE mediated asthma.



      MEPs devise strategy to tackle vaccine hesitancy among public, BMJ 2018; 360 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k1378 (Published 23 March 2018) BMJ 2018;360:k1378




      In fact, there are more than a few prior indicators that point into the same direction:




      Lin Edwards: "Vaccination may make flu worse if exposed to a second strain" Medical Xpress, 30 Aug 2013



      Ed susman: "Ferrets Keep Flu Vaccine/H1N1 Pot Boiling", MedPage Today, 2012:
      The vaccinated ferrets also accumulated significantly greater lung virus titers -- 4.96 plot forming units/ml versus 4.23 pfu/ml (P=0.01).
      Skowronski told MedPage Today that their work attempted to verify controversial findings that the seasonal flu vaccination resulted in more severe acute symptoms if that individual was infected with pandemic H1N1.



      Naveed Z. Janjua et al.: "Seasonal Influenza Vaccine and Increased Risk of Pandemic A/H1N1-Related Illness: First Detection of the Association in British Columbia, Canada", Clinical Infectious Diseases, Volume 51, Issue 9, 1 November 2010, Pages 1017–1027, https://doi.org/10.1086/656586



      Annual vaccination may hamper the development of cross-reactive immunity against influenza A viruses of novel subtypes, that would otherwise be induced by natural infection.”



      “Studies of repeated vaccination across multiple seasons suggest that vaccine effectiveness may be influenced by more than one prior season. In immunogenicity studies, repeated vaccination blunts the hemagglutinin antibody response, particularly for H3N2.”







      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        1
        down vote










        up vote
        1
        down vote









        The claim may be indeed a bit premature to confirm as either true or not true, for the general outlook. It is a robust correlational finding. Explanations of causation may follow, if confirmed. But it cannot and mustn't be dismissed out of hand.



        But the finding is a valid one and the outlet from which we came here reported not that much exaggerated as perhaps to be expected, following a guild by association approach for that particular outlet!*



        The original study reads in its abstract:




        We provide overwhelming evidence that humans generate infectious aerosols and quantitative data to improve mathematical models of transmission and public health interventions. We show that sneezing is rare and not important for—and that coughing is not required for—influenza virus aerosolization. Our findings, that upper and lower airway infection are independent and that fine-particle exhaled aerosols reflect infection in the lung, opened a pathway for a deeper understanding of the human biology of influenza infection and transmission. Our observation of an association between repeated vaccination and increased viral aerosol generation demonstrated the power of our method, but needs confirmation.
        Yan J et al.: "Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community.", Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Jan 30;115(5):1081-1086. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1716561115.




        That is **Fine-aerosol viral RNA was also positively associated with having influenza vaccination for both the current and prior season. **



        That are two new findings in this study:




        1. and more important, there was apparently no ned to cough and sneeze to spread infection.

        2. "The association of current and prior year vaccination with increased shedding of influenza A might lead one to speculate that certain types of prior immunity promote lung inflammation, airway closure, and aerosol generation. This first observation of the phenomenon needs confirmation. If confirmed, this observation, together with recent literature suggesting reduced protection with annual vaccination, would have implications for influenza vaccination recommendations and policies."


        Although point 2 is indeed ripe with speculation, these are plausible. And there simply are no studies that would openly contradict any of its findings.



        We have to keep in mind there is no "the flu vaccine" in the first place.




        [Suzanne Marie Allmart: "While this study [from the claim,LLC] needs confirmation, it also happens to be the only study that has specifically looked into this question. Data showing that flu vaccination does reduce transmission and spread of the virus doesn’t exist to contradict this study.



        There is evidence to support that the big picture very well may be that seasonal flu vaccines 1) make pandemic strains worse, 2) reduce illness during well-matched years, but at the expense of immunity in subsequent years 3) impair immune-functioning, leaving one more susceptible to other illnesses, including the other 84% of the 200 or so non-influenza viruses and bacteria that can cause influenza-like illness (ILI) 4) make things worse in years that negative efficacy cannot be ruled out for a given age group or vaccine type, and 5) come with risks, including but not limited to SIRVA, seizures, GBS/paralysis, narcolepsy and potentially death. The safety of the flu vaccine one year does not guarantee its safety the next.

        "In Summary of CDC Flu Vaccine Effectiveness Estimates, 2004–2018 (and other studies)", Medium, March 2018.]2




        Other authorities evaluate the claim as such:




        Ashley York: "Breathing alone may spread the flu", Nature Reviews Microbiology volume 16, page 123 (2018):
        Influenza viruses have been proposed to spread through aerosols, but the importance of this mode of transmission between humans is unclear. Now, Yan et al. provide evidence that humans generate infectious aerosols by characterizing the virus in exhaled breath during natural breathing, prompted speech, coughing and sneezing. By analysing paired nasopharyngeal and breath samples from infected individuals, the authors observed that a significant proportion of the infected individuals shed infectious virus in aerosol particles that have the potential to spread by aerosol transmission (≤5 μm). Surprisingly, coughing and sneezing was not necessary for the generation of infectious aerosols, and sneezing did not increase the amount of viral RNA in aerosol particles. The authors argue that these findings could be used to improve models of airborne influenza virus transmission.



        Richard T. Ellison III, MD: "Airborne Influenza Transmission", NEJM Journal Watch, 2018:

        Infectious virus was present in 89% of the NP samples and 39% of fine aerosol samples. Geometric mean RNA copy numbers for fine and coarse aerosol samples were 3.8×104 and 1.2×104 per 30 minutes, respectively, compared with 8.2×108 per NP swab. The amount of viral shedding in fine aerosol samples declined with the number of days after symptom onset and was increased for males and with coughing, although shedding occurred without coughing or sneezing. Self-reported flu vaccination in both the 2012–2013 and previous flu seasons was associated with fine aerosol shedding but not NP or coarse aerosol shedding.



        COMMENT

        This study supplements prior evidence supporting the risk for influenza transmission by fine aerosols and will renew discussions regarding the optimal approach to protecting healthcare providers from acquiring the virus (NEJM JW Infect Dis Nov 2009 and JAMA 2009; 302:1865). The authors acknowledge that the unexpected observation of increased fine aerosol shedding in vaccine recipients requires confirmation in additional studies.




        And even more interesting a BMJ article trying to make sense of this:




        “Self-reported vaccination for the current season was associated with a trend (P < 0.10) toward higher viral shedding in fine-aerosol samples; vaccination with both the current and previous year’s seasonal vaccines, however, was significantly associated with greater fine-aerosol shedding in unadjusted and adjusted models (P < 0.01). In adjusted models, we observed 6.3 (95% CI 1.9–21.5) times more aerosol shedding among cases with vaccination in the current and previous season compared with having no vaccination in those two seasons.” [7⁠]



        This result makes a lot of sense. When you have influenza virus allergy and are infected, you have more mast cell degranulation, more histamine, more mucus, more sneezing, more viral shedding.



        Increased hospitalization rates have been observed in asthma patients that have received the influenza vaccine. Again, this is as predicted because asthma patients are likely to produce stronger IgE responses to the viral proteins upon vaccination. On subsequent virus exposure, they can be expected to develop severe IgE mediated asthma.



        MEPs devise strategy to tackle vaccine hesitancy among public, BMJ 2018; 360 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k1378 (Published 23 March 2018) BMJ 2018;360:k1378




        In fact, there are more than a few prior indicators that point into the same direction:




        Lin Edwards: "Vaccination may make flu worse if exposed to a second strain" Medical Xpress, 30 Aug 2013



        Ed susman: "Ferrets Keep Flu Vaccine/H1N1 Pot Boiling", MedPage Today, 2012:
        The vaccinated ferrets also accumulated significantly greater lung virus titers -- 4.96 plot forming units/ml versus 4.23 pfu/ml (P=0.01).
        Skowronski told MedPage Today that their work attempted to verify controversial findings that the seasonal flu vaccination resulted in more severe acute symptoms if that individual was infected with pandemic H1N1.



        Naveed Z. Janjua et al.: "Seasonal Influenza Vaccine and Increased Risk of Pandemic A/H1N1-Related Illness: First Detection of the Association in British Columbia, Canada", Clinical Infectious Diseases, Volume 51, Issue 9, 1 November 2010, Pages 1017–1027, https://doi.org/10.1086/656586



        Annual vaccination may hamper the development of cross-reactive immunity against influenza A viruses of novel subtypes, that would otherwise be induced by natural infection.”



        “Studies of repeated vaccination across multiple seasons suggest that vaccine effectiveness may be influenced by more than one prior season. In immunogenicity studies, repeated vaccination blunts the hemagglutinin antibody response, particularly for H3N2.”







        share|improve this answer














        The claim may be indeed a bit premature to confirm as either true or not true, for the general outlook. It is a robust correlational finding. Explanations of causation may follow, if confirmed. But it cannot and mustn't be dismissed out of hand.



        But the finding is a valid one and the outlet from which we came here reported not that much exaggerated as perhaps to be expected, following a guild by association approach for that particular outlet!*



        The original study reads in its abstract:




        We provide overwhelming evidence that humans generate infectious aerosols and quantitative data to improve mathematical models of transmission and public health interventions. We show that sneezing is rare and not important for—and that coughing is not required for—influenza virus aerosolization. Our findings, that upper and lower airway infection are independent and that fine-particle exhaled aerosols reflect infection in the lung, opened a pathway for a deeper understanding of the human biology of influenza infection and transmission. Our observation of an association between repeated vaccination and increased viral aerosol generation demonstrated the power of our method, but needs confirmation.
        Yan J et al.: "Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community.", Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Jan 30;115(5):1081-1086. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1716561115.




        That is **Fine-aerosol viral RNA was also positively associated with having influenza vaccination for both the current and prior season. **



        That are two new findings in this study:




        1. and more important, there was apparently no ned to cough and sneeze to spread infection.

        2. "The association of current and prior year vaccination with increased shedding of influenza A might lead one to speculate that certain types of prior immunity promote lung inflammation, airway closure, and aerosol generation. This first observation of the phenomenon needs confirmation. If confirmed, this observation, together with recent literature suggesting reduced protection with annual vaccination, would have implications for influenza vaccination recommendations and policies."


        Although point 2 is indeed ripe with speculation, these are plausible. And there simply are no studies that would openly contradict any of its findings.



        We have to keep in mind there is no "the flu vaccine" in the first place.




        [Suzanne Marie Allmart: "While this study [from the claim,LLC] needs confirmation, it also happens to be the only study that has specifically looked into this question. Data showing that flu vaccination does reduce transmission and spread of the virus doesn’t exist to contradict this study.



        There is evidence to support that the big picture very well may be that seasonal flu vaccines 1) make pandemic strains worse, 2) reduce illness during well-matched years, but at the expense of immunity in subsequent years 3) impair immune-functioning, leaving one more susceptible to other illnesses, including the other 84% of the 200 or so non-influenza viruses and bacteria that can cause influenza-like illness (ILI) 4) make things worse in years that negative efficacy cannot be ruled out for a given age group or vaccine type, and 5) come with risks, including but not limited to SIRVA, seizures, GBS/paralysis, narcolepsy and potentially death. The safety of the flu vaccine one year does not guarantee its safety the next.

        "In Summary of CDC Flu Vaccine Effectiveness Estimates, 2004–2018 (and other studies)", Medium, March 2018.]2




        Other authorities evaluate the claim as such:




        Ashley York: "Breathing alone may spread the flu", Nature Reviews Microbiology volume 16, page 123 (2018):
        Influenza viruses have been proposed to spread through aerosols, but the importance of this mode of transmission between humans is unclear. Now, Yan et al. provide evidence that humans generate infectious aerosols by characterizing the virus in exhaled breath during natural breathing, prompted speech, coughing and sneezing. By analysing paired nasopharyngeal and breath samples from infected individuals, the authors observed that a significant proportion of the infected individuals shed infectious virus in aerosol particles that have the potential to spread by aerosol transmission (≤5 μm). Surprisingly, coughing and sneezing was not necessary for the generation of infectious aerosols, and sneezing did not increase the amount of viral RNA in aerosol particles. The authors argue that these findings could be used to improve models of airborne influenza virus transmission.



        Richard T. Ellison III, MD: "Airborne Influenza Transmission", NEJM Journal Watch, 2018:

        Infectious virus was present in 89% of the NP samples and 39% of fine aerosol samples. Geometric mean RNA copy numbers for fine and coarse aerosol samples were 3.8×104 and 1.2×104 per 30 minutes, respectively, compared with 8.2×108 per NP swab. The amount of viral shedding in fine aerosol samples declined with the number of days after symptom onset and was increased for males and with coughing, although shedding occurred without coughing or sneezing. Self-reported flu vaccination in both the 2012–2013 and previous flu seasons was associated with fine aerosol shedding but not NP or coarse aerosol shedding.



        COMMENT

        This study supplements prior evidence supporting the risk for influenza transmission by fine aerosols and will renew discussions regarding the optimal approach to protecting healthcare providers from acquiring the virus (NEJM JW Infect Dis Nov 2009 and JAMA 2009; 302:1865). The authors acknowledge that the unexpected observation of increased fine aerosol shedding in vaccine recipients requires confirmation in additional studies.




        And even more interesting a BMJ article trying to make sense of this:




        “Self-reported vaccination for the current season was associated with a trend (P < 0.10) toward higher viral shedding in fine-aerosol samples; vaccination with both the current and previous year’s seasonal vaccines, however, was significantly associated with greater fine-aerosol shedding in unadjusted and adjusted models (P < 0.01). In adjusted models, we observed 6.3 (95% CI 1.9–21.5) times more aerosol shedding among cases with vaccination in the current and previous season compared with having no vaccination in those two seasons.” [7⁠]



        This result makes a lot of sense. When you have influenza virus allergy and are infected, you have more mast cell degranulation, more histamine, more mucus, more sneezing, more viral shedding.



        Increased hospitalization rates have been observed in asthma patients that have received the influenza vaccine. Again, this is as predicted because asthma patients are likely to produce stronger IgE responses to the viral proteins upon vaccination. On subsequent virus exposure, they can be expected to develop severe IgE mediated asthma.



        MEPs devise strategy to tackle vaccine hesitancy among public, BMJ 2018; 360 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k1378 (Published 23 March 2018) BMJ 2018;360:k1378




        In fact, there are more than a few prior indicators that point into the same direction:




        Lin Edwards: "Vaccination may make flu worse if exposed to a second strain" Medical Xpress, 30 Aug 2013



        Ed susman: "Ferrets Keep Flu Vaccine/H1N1 Pot Boiling", MedPage Today, 2012:
        The vaccinated ferrets also accumulated significantly greater lung virus titers -- 4.96 plot forming units/ml versus 4.23 pfu/ml (P=0.01).
        Skowronski told MedPage Today that their work attempted to verify controversial findings that the seasonal flu vaccination resulted in more severe acute symptoms if that individual was infected with pandemic H1N1.



        Naveed Z. Janjua et al.: "Seasonal Influenza Vaccine and Increased Risk of Pandemic A/H1N1-Related Illness: First Detection of the Association in British Columbia, Canada", Clinical Infectious Diseases, Volume 51, Issue 9, 1 November 2010, Pages 1017–1027, https://doi.org/10.1086/656586



        Annual vaccination may hamper the development of cross-reactive immunity against influenza A viruses of novel subtypes, that would otherwise be induced by natural infection.”



        “Studies of repeated vaccination across multiple seasons suggest that vaccine effectiveness may be influenced by more than one prior season. In immunogenicity studies, repeated vaccination blunts the hemagglutinin antibody response, particularly for H3N2.”








        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 2 days ago

























        answered 2 days ago









        LangLangC

        13.1k45974




        13.1k45974















            Popular posts from this blog

            Quarter-circle Tiles

            build a pushdown automaton that recognizes the reverse language of a given pushdown automaton?

            Mont Emei