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Have live viral vaccine practices among the pediatric liver transplant community changed? A survey study of pediatric liver transplant centers across the United States

Title: Have live viral vaccine practices among the pediatric liver transplant community changed? A survey study of pediatric liver transplant centers across the United States

Source: Pediatric Transplantation 2025, 29 (4): e70100

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Date of publication: May 2025

Publication type: Article  

Abstract: Background: Expanded data regarding the safety and immunogenicity of live viral vaccines (LVV) during the posttransplant period has resulted in updated recommendations endorsing LVVs for select pediatric liver transplant (LT) recipients, a significant change from historical guidelines. The goal of this survey study was to understand current LVV practices among pediatric LT centers.

Methods: A 20-question email survey detailing center-specific pre- and post-LT LVV practices was distributed between May 1, 2024, and August 1, 2024, to a representative from each US center participating in the Society of Pediatric Liver Transplantation (SPLIT).

Results: The overall survey response rate was 95% (41/43 centers). In the pretransplant period, 85% of centers (35/41) administer LVVs starting at 6 months of age, 7% (3/41) wait until 9 months, and another 7% start at 12 months. The majority of centers (83%, 34/41) require a 4-week interval between LVVs and active transplant listing. In the posttransplant period, 39% of centers (16/41) never recommend LVVs, citing perceived limited safety data (63%, 10/16) and inability to reach provider consensus (31%, 5/16) as reasons. Among the 25 centers that offer LVVs, barriers faced in implementing LVV protocols include parental concerns about change from historical recommendation (48%, 12/25) and parental concerns about safety/efficacy (36%, 9/25).

Conclusions: The majority of pediatric LT centers across the US now recommend LVVs for select LT recipients. However, these centers face barriers in vaccinating all nonimmune eligible transplant recipients. Research is needed to understand and overcome barriers to widespread acceptance and implementation of evidence-based LVV recommendations.

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