Immunizations for children and teens with suppressed immune systems

PDF download is not available for Arabic and Urdu languages at this time. Please use the browser print function instead

Treatment to suppress the immune system affects how your child’s body responds to routine immunizations. This guide discusses how to keep your child healthy while taking immune-suppressing treatment.

Key points

  • Immune-suppressing treatment can make inactivated vaccines work less well and can make live vaccines cause disease.
  • Your child should be up-to-date on all inactivated vaccines at least two weeks before starting immune-suppressing treatment.
  • Your child should be up-to-date on all live vaccines at least four to six weeks before starting immune-suppressing treatment.
  • Family members should be up-to-date on most vaccines, to help keep your child healthy.
  • Work with your child’s doctor and the treatment team to make sure your child’s immunizations and immune-suppressing treatment work well together.
Last updated: April 18th 2011