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JAOA • Vol 107 • No suppl_1 • March 2007 • 14-18
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Herpes Zoster Vaccine: Clinical Trial Evidence and Implications for Medical Practice

M. Susan Burke, MD

Dr. Burke is a clinical assistant professor of medicine at Thomas Jefferson University Medical School and director of the Internal Medicine Clinical Care Center at Lankenau Hospital in Wynnewood, Pa.

Address correspondence to M. Susan Burke, MD, FACP, 100 Lancaster Ave, Area B15, Wynnewood, PA 19096-3450. E-mail:burkes{at}mlhs.org

This review of the data from the Shingles Prevention Study (SPS) highlights the efficacy and safety of a high-titer live attenuated herpes zoster virus vaccine in preventing herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia (PHN) in adults aged 60 years or older. In the SPS, the vaccine reduced the burden of illness due to herpes zoster disease by 61.1% and the incidence of its most common and debilitating sequela, PHN, by 66.5%. In addition, vaccination was associated with a 51.3% reduction in the overall incidence of herpes zoster. Also, subjects in whom herpes zoster did develop had decreased pain and discomfort. The vaccine was safe in the SPS population, with little differentiation from the safety profile of placebo other than an increased risk for reactions at the injection site. Rates of serious adverse events, systemic adverse events, hospitalization, and death were low and similar to those observed in the group that received placebo.







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