Revaccination of persons with an immediate reaction after the first dose of mRNA COVID-19 vaccine

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_72B4A659BAD4
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Abstract (Abstract): shot summary in a article that contain essentials elements presented during a scientific conference, lecture or from a poster.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Revaccination of persons with an immediate reaction after the first dose of mRNA COVID-19 vaccine
Title of the conference
Abstracts from the European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology Hybrid Congress, 10-12 July 2021
Author(s)
Stehlin F., Canton L., Girard C., Miauton A., Santos A., Genoud P., Ribi C., Meylan S., Muller Y. D.
ISSN
1398-9995
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2021
Volume
76
Number
SUPPL 110
Series
Allergy
Pages
516-517
Language
english
Notes
L636589496
2021-12-10
Abstract
Background: The newly developed mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines can provoke anaphylaxis. Management of persons with an immediate reaction suggestive of an allergy after the first dose remains to be defined. The newly developed mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines can provoke anaphylaxis. Management of persons with an immediate reaction suggestive of an allergy after the first dose remains to be defined. Method: Skin testing was performed with both mRNA-based vaccines. Upon a negative skin test, a 2-step (10 + 90%) revaccination protocol was performed. Positive skin tests were confirmed with a Basophil Activation Test (BAT). Results: 25'162 first doses of COVID-19 vaccines (80% from Pfizer BioNTech) were administered at the university hospital of Lausanne. Respectively, 3.47 and 1.99 immediate reactions per 10'000 doses were observed with the vaccine of Pfizer BioNTech and Moderna. An allergy workup was performed in 18 persons among who 11 were referred from external centers. 17/18 (94%) were females and 7/18 (39%) had criteria for anaphylaxis. 3/18 (17%), 2/3 with anaphylaxis, had positive intradermal reactivity after 20 minutes for both mRNA vaccines. BAT was positive in 2 persons and is pending in the third one. 14 patients had negative skin testing. Among those 8 received a 2-step re-vaccination protocol, 3 refused revaccination, and 3 wait for revaccination. 8/8 with negative tests tolerated the 2-step re-vaccination. One patient with suspicious skin tests but positive BAT developed again urticaria 7 minutes after the 90% dose. Conclusion: Only 22% of patients, all females, with an immediate reaction to the first vaccination were sensitized to the vaccine. A two-step re-vaccination protocol could be safely administered upon negative skin testing.
Keywords
messenger RNA, RNA vaccine, SARS-CoV-2 vaccine, adult, adverse drug reaction, anaphylaxis, basophil activation test, conference abstract, female, human, immediate type hypersensitivity, major clinical study, male, revaccination, skin test, university hospital
Create date
23/12/2021 11:55
Last modification date
19/10/2022 5:40
Usage data