Currently, there are two outbreaks of serogroup B meningitits in 
the United States; eight cases have been reported from Princeton 
University and three from the University of California, Santa Barbara, 
according to releases from each state’s public health department.
An eighth Princeton University student is 
hospitalized and receiving treatment after she was diagnosed with 
meningitis on Nov. 21, according to a statement from Princeton 
University. 
Health officials are conducting tests to determine whether this latest case is related to the seven cases of Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B meningitis cases associated with the university since March.
As of Nov. 14, there have been seven cases of confirmed invasive meningococcal disease among six students and one visitor to the campus, according to a Princeton University press release. 
Six patients have recovered, and the most 
recent patient remains hospitalized, according to a statement from the 
New Jersey Department of Health.
Two of the three cases at the University of California, Santa Barbara have been confirmed as N. meningitidis serogroup B meningitis, according to a press release.
 Laboratory testing is being performed on the third. The first two cases
 are recovering, and the third is currently receiving medical care. 
In response to the meningococcal serogroup B 
outbreak that began at Princeton in March, university officials said 
they expect to make the first of a serogroup B meningococcal two-dose 
series vaccine (4CMenB; Bexsero, Novartis) currently approved for use 
outside the United States available in early December. The second dose 
should be available in February, according to the statement. 
“The CDC and FDA have determined that the 
unique pattern of the disease in this Princeton outbreak — the high rate
 of cases that have occurred and over the long period of time they have 
occurred in — warrant expanding access to a group B vaccine for that 
high-risk population,” Amanda Cohn, MD, a medical officer with 
the CDC, said during a press briefing. “Each outbreak situation is 
unique and requires rigorous assessment before use of this vaccine can 
be considered. With that said, we’re open to recommending this vaccine 
during other outbreaks of serogroup B meningococcal disease, and we’ll 
follow each outbreak very closely and make decisions about requesting 
use of vaccines for additional outbreaks when needed.” 
The university said it will cover the cost of 
the vaccine for all students who receive it. Students younger than 18 
years will need a signed consent form from their parent or guardian 
before receiving the vaccine. 
The CDC is expected to recommend that all 
Princeton University undergraduate students receive the vaccine. This 
includes students who live in dormitories and off campus, and graduate 
students who live in dormitories, as well as members of the university 
community who have functional and anatomic asplenia (including sickle 
cell disease) and late complement component deficiencies. 
The vaccine would be made available only to these groups, and it would not be administered anywhere else.
Meningococcal 
vaccines licensed in the United States include four of the five most 
common serogroups: A, C, Y and W-135. However, there is currently no 
vaccine licensed in the United States that protects against serogroup B.
 
-Updated Nov. 26
 http://www.healio.com/
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