Dr. William Atkinson, associate director for immunization education at the Immunization Action Coalition in St. Paul, Minn., addressed a meeting of the Mid America Immunization Coalition on Thursday in Kansas City, Mo. (Photo by Mike Sherry/Hale Center for Journalism)
Dr. William Atkinson, associate director for immunization education at the Immunization Action Coalition in St. Paul, Minn., addressed a meeting of the Mid America Immunization Coalition on Thursday in Kansas City, Mo. (Photo by Mike Sherry/Hale Center for Journalism)

Costs may limit use of meningitis B vaccine

December 5, 2014  |    |  4 min read

Financial considerations might influence use of a newly approved vaccine targeted at a strain of bacterial meningitis that often strikes college campuses, according to speakers at an event Thursday in Kansas City, Mo., sponsored by the Mid America Immunization Coalition (MAIC).

The drug in question is Pfizer’s Trumenba, which gained approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in late October. It is the first vaccine aimed at preventing a type of bacterial meningitis known as strain B, a potentially life-threatening disease that attacks the lining surrounding the brain and spinal cord.

But the keynote speaker at the event, Dr. William Atkinson, said that meningitis B is extremely rare, with only about 250 cases in the United States last year.

Therefore, he said, the question is whether it will make fiscal sense for the government to recommend widespread use of the vaccine when it affects relatively few people.

“It is hard to justify economically to vaccinate millions of people to prevent 250 cases,” Atkinson said, “particularly when a lot of those cases are happening in babies, where the vaccine is not licensed yet.”

The FDA approved the drug for use in people ages 10 to 25.

An expert in vaccines, Atkinson is a former official with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and is now associate director for immunization education at the Immunization Action Coalition in St. Paul, Minn.

He expects the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which is part of the CDC, to make a decision about the recommended usage of Trumenba at its February meeting in Atlanta.

Atkinson said indications are that the committee will make a fairly narrow recommendation on populations that should be vaccinated, including certain immune-suppressed individuals and people in areas that have experienced an outbreak. He does not expect the recommendation to cover college students.

Outbreaks of the strain occurred last year at Princeton University in New Jersey and at the University of California – Santa Barbara.

One Kansas man, Andy Marso, who has become an advocate for meningitis vaccination, contracted meningitis B a decade ago while a student at the University of Kansas.

Marso attended Thursday’s meeting to be recognized as one of MAIC’s 2014 Immunization Heroes for his advocacy work, particularly on behalf of a new Missouri law – enacted in July – requiring that all college students living on campus at public colleges and universities be vaccinated against meningitis.

(Marso is now a reporter for the KHI News Service, which is a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor, a reporting collaborative that includes KCPT and KCUR.)

The disease claimed the front half of both Marso’s feet and all of his fingers, except for his right thumb, when it compromised blood flow to his extremities.

Marso expressed concern that the three-dose regimen might prove too expensive for patients, with indications that it will cost more than the roughly $100 per dose it costs for vaccines for other strains of meningitis.

“There is going to be an issue of cost – no doubt about it,” he said.

Atkinson said insurance would likely cover populations included in recommendations from the CDC, but that it could be an out-of-pocket expense for others, such as parents who are sending their children to college.

Marso said his illness cost his father’s health insurance $2 million in the first year, including 140 days in the hospital and eight inpatient surgeries.

He said he expects to testify at the CDC committee meeting in February, and he said he realized government officials must make a cost-benefit analysis as part of their recommendation on who should receive the vaccination.

But in weighing the scope of their recommendations, he said he hoped the committee would consider the pain and suffering that go along with the after-effects of the disease.

“I hope they also account for people like me who are going to have ongoing medical costs for the rest of their lives because of this,” he said. “That is something that needs to be considered.”

Mike Sherry is a health reporter with Heartland Health Monitor, a reporting collaboration among KCUR Public Radio, KCPT Public Television, KHI News Service and Kansas Public Radio.

Major Funding for Health coverage on KCPT provided by Assurant Employee Benefits and the Health Care Foundation of Greater Kansas City.

Tags:

Reading these stories is free, but telling them is not. Start your monthly gift now to support Flatland’s community-focused reporting.

Nick’s Picks | Messi, Jail, Buses, and More …

June 1, 2026

World Cup Team(s) Arrive It’s starting to feel real. The first World Cup team has landed in Kansas City. Defending champions Argentina touched down at KCI airport on Sunday and will begin practicing today at Sporting KC’s training facility in Wyandotte County. Much of the attention, of course, is focused on Lionel Messi. The soccer…

Related Stories

(L-R) Christina Hill and her grandmother, Lucy Wilkerson, pose for a photo with Christina’s kids, Hunter Hill Harris and Summer Hill Harris, at Lucy’s assisted living home in Grain Valley, Missouri. (Chase Castor | Flatland)

Caregiving Squeezes Households Between Young and Old 

Melissa Johnson knows her life is hardly unique. The Oak Grove, Missouri, woman cares for her infirm 72-year-old mother, who lives in her own home nearby.  She calls her mother daily. She brings dinner to her several times a week.  Johnson, who coordinates care with her aunt, a team of therapists, and a nurse, is…

Read More >
Rev. Tarris Rosell and sister Rosemary Flanigan

Feeding Tubes and Defibrillators

Let’s begin with two stories about the growing and important field of bioethics. The first is from Ryan Pferdehirt, the newly named Flanigan Chair in Bioethics at the Kansas City-based Center for Practical Bioethics. A hospital once asked him to consult on a bioethics case in which a son thought his desperately ill, hospitalized mother…

Read More >
People walk outside the Wyandotte County Public Health Department in Kansas City, Kansas. (Zane Irwin | Kansas News Service

After Tuberculosis Outbreak, Wyandotte County Parts Ways with Health Director

The director of the Wyandotte County Public Health Department is no longer with the agency, a spokesperson confirmed Tuesday. It comes after turmoil during the handling of the major tuberculosis outbreak, shown by emails obtained by the Kansas News Service. Elisha Caldwell had been head of the local health department while an outbreak of TB grew…

Read More >