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The Asian Tiger mosquito can transmit the Zika virus. (Flickr via creative commons) The Asian Tiger mosquito can transmit the Zika virus. (Flickr via creative commons)

The Asian Tiger mosquito can transmit the Zika virus. (Flickr via creative commons)

Jon Greenberg
By Jon Greenberg February 16, 2016

Canadian website wrongly links whooping cough vaccine to Zika

There are many unanswered questions about the connection between the Zika virus and microcephaly, a birth defect in which the baby’s head is much smaller than expected. Not every baby of an infected woman develops this syndrome, and the mechanism by which the virus might affect the fetus is uncertain.

But moving around on the Internet is an entirely different take on the tie between Zika and microcephaly. It doesn’t exist, according to certain blogs, tweets and articles on conspiracy-leaning websites.

The Canadian-based Centre for Research on Globalization, a group that advances ideas it feels the "mainstream press" ignores, had an article Feb. 4, 2016, from Dr. Gary Kohls that challenged the linkage theory and said the primary suspect is DTaP,  a common vaccination to prevent whooping cough (along with tetanus and diphtheria).

"In the whole week of reports that I heard or read about, not a single interviewer asked about – and not a single ‘expert’ or mainstream journalists ever mentioned the most likely triggering cause of the epidemic, and that is the neurotoxic, cytotoxic, genotoxic, aluminum that was in every DTaP shot, a vaccine that had been recently mandated (early in 2015) by the Brazilian government to be injected into pregnant women – and therefore into their fetuses," Kohls wrote.

So is DTaP is the "most likely triggering cause" of microcephaly?

Most of Kohls’ article describes why the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, pharmaceutical companies and researchers would care to blame the Zika virus rather than the vaccine, but its main point is the overlap of the microcephaly incidence and Brazil’s immunization campaign.

Brazil did begin vaccinating pregnant women starting in late 2014. (Hat tip to Brazilian fact-checker Cristina Tardáguila at Lupa News.) However, according to the Brazilian Health Department press release, the vaccine they distributed was a version called Tdap. This was part of an international push to reduce whooping cough in infants. Inoculating mothers late in pregnancy allowed them to pass antibodies to their unborn children.

For the rest of this fact-check, we look at Tdap. The Web article named the incorrect vaccine, but if there’s any merit to Kohls’ case -- and there isn’t -- it lies with the vaccine Brazil used.

Kohl also wrote that "there are 35 other countries across the globe that have confirmed cases of Zika virus illness, but none are having any microcephaly reports."

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control does show about that number of countries and territories where Zika has been found, but in 13 of those places, there are few cases. Either no instances of Zika have been found in the past two months, or the number of cases was less than 10. So it’s a bit misleading to suggest that the absence of microcephaly disproves the link between the birth defect and the Zika virus. If we find more detailed statistics on the number of cases of Zika and microcephaly, we’ll update this item, but there’s a much bigger problem with Kohls’ statement.

Evidence on the safety of Tdap

The weakest part of the argument that Tdap plays a role in microcephaly is that  pregnant women in the United States, and elsewhere, have been getting the vaccine and there is no hint of a connection to microcephaly. Elyse Kharbanda is a top national researcher on vaccine safety at HealthPartners Institute for Education and Research in Minneapolis.

"Our research has not shown any link between Tdap vaccination in pregnant women and microcephaly in their children," Kharbanda told us.

Melissa Brower in the CDC press office reiterated that point.

"Our safety monitoring is continuous," Brower said. "We have not observed any unusual or unexpected patterns of reporting that would indicate a potential safety problem with maternal Tdap vaccination and microcephaly as a birth outcome."

A 2015 study published in the peer-reviewed Journal of the American Medical Association included over 29,000 pregnant women in six states. It found no problems of any birth defects for any woman who was vaccinated with Tdap during pregnancy.

Another JAMA study looked at over 26,000 pregnant women in California and reached the same conclusion.

Researchers at the Vanderbilt Vaccine Research Program further affirm the safety of Tdap. Director and specialist in pediatric infectious diseases Buddy Creech said nothing shows any link between the vaccine and microcephaly or any other birth defect. Creech also noted that the vaccine is given later in pregnancy, between weeks 27 and 36. That timing is important.

"Most organ development and structural changes are occurring in the first trimester," Creech said. "It’s after the period of most intense organ development, so it removes the question of whether a vaccine caused congenital heart disease, etc."

However, the CDC says in some cases, microcephaly can occur after the first trimester, so in theory, a vaccination could overlap with the onset of microcephaly. But that doesn’t change the rest of the research pattern.

The United Kingdom launched a vaccination program in 2012, making Tdap available to about 700,000 pregnant women. Researchers looked at the impact on about 20,000 of them and found no increase in pregnancy risks.

On a related note, the New England Journal of Medicine reports that the Zika virus was found in the brain tissue of an aborted fetus suffering from microcephaly. While this says nothing about the role of Tdap, it does directly link the Zika virus to a particular birth defect.

We contacted the editors at the Centre for Research on Globalization and they said they forwarded our questions to Kohls. If we hear back, we’ll update this item.

Our ruling

An online article on the website of the Centre for Research of Globalization said the DTaP vaccine is the mostly likely cause of microcephaly in Brazil. First of all, Brazil used Tdap, a slightly different version of the vaccine. More important, not a bit of evidence supports the assertion that either variety lies behind microcephaly. Many thousands of pregnant women in the United States and around the world have been getting this vaccine for at least five years and multiple studies have found no ill effects on their babies. Not a single study has raised a red flag for any birth defect and certainly not microcephaly.

In addition, administering the vaccine later in pregnancy reduces the likelihood that it will interfere with fetal development.

The statement is inaccurate in every respect including naming the wrong version of the vaccine used in Brazil. We rate it False.

Our Sources

Global Research, The Zika Virus, the Brazilian Microcephaly Outbreak. Covering-up Another Latrogenic (sic) Disorder, Feb. 4, 2016

Jon Rappoport’s Blog, Zika: Who launched the fake-epidemic story in Brazil?, Feb. 7, 2016

Brazilian Shrunken head babies, Zika or TDAP?, undated, accessed Feb. 9, 2016

Signs of the Times, Birth defects in Brazil: Is the cause the Zika virus or the Tdap vaccine?, Feb. 9, 2016

Natural News, What you are not being told about the Zika virus, Feb. 4, 2016

Brazilian Ministry of Health, Ministry of Health provides the SUS pertussis vaccine for pregnant women, Nov. 17, 2014

Journal of the American Medical Association, Association of Tdap Vaccination With Acute Events and Adverse Birth Outcomes Among Pregnant Women With Prior Tetanus-Containing Immunizations, Oct. 20, 2015

Journal of the American Medical Association, Evaluation of the Association of Maternal Pertussis Vaccination With Obstetric Events and Birth Outcomes, Nov. 12, 2014

European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, Countries and territories with local Zika transmission, Feb. 11, 2016

World Health Organization, SAGE pertussis working group, April 2014

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Tetanus, Diphtheria, Pertussis Vaccination Coverage Before, During, and After Pregnancy — 16 States and New York City, 2011, May 22, 2015

Reuters, Whooping cough vaccine safe for pregnant women, July 31, 2014

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Get the Whooping Cough Vaccine While You Are Pregnant, May 29, 2015

American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Update on Immunization and Pregnancy: Tetanus, Diphtheria, and Pertussis Vaccination, June 2013

International Business Times, GM mosquitos and evil vaccines: Ridiculous and concerning Zika virus conspiracy theories, Feb. 4, 2016

Forbes, Safety of Flu and Pertussis Vaccines in Pregnancy Assessed, Nov. 25, 2014

C. Buddy Creech, associate professor, Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Feb. 11, 2016

Elyse O. Kharbanda, research investigator, HealthPartners Institute for Education and Research, Feb. 10, 2016

Melissa Brower, spokesperson, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Feb. 11, 2016

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Canadian website wrongly links whooping cough vaccine to Zika

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