Revaccination outcomes among adolescents and adults with suspected hypersensitivity reactions following COVID-19 vaccination: A Canadian immunization research network study Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • BACKGROUND: COVID-19 vaccination has been associated with anaphylaxis and hypersensitivity reactions. Infectious disease physicians and allergists in the Canadian Special Immunization Clinic (SIC) Network developed guidance for evaluating patients with adverse events following immunization (AEFI) including suspected hypersensitivity. This study evaluated management and adverse event recurrence following subsequent COVID-19 vaccinations. METHODS: Individuals aged 12 years and older enrolled at participating SICs before February 28, 2023 who were referred for suspected or diagnosed hypersensitivity reaction following COVID-19 vaccination, or for prevaccination assessment of suspected allergy to a COVID-19 vaccine component were included. De-identified clinical assessments and revaccination data, captured in a centralized database, were analyzed. The Brighton Collaboration case definition (BCCD) for anaphylaxis (2023 version) was applied. RESULTS: The analysis included 206 participants from 13 sites: 26 participants referred for pre-vaccination assessment and 180 participants referred for adverse events following COVID-19 vaccination (15/180 [8.3%] with BCCD confirmed anaphylaxis, 84 [46.7%] with immediate hypersensitivity symptoms not meeting BCCD, 33 [18.3%] with other diagnosed hypersensitivity reactions, and 48 [26.7%] participants with a final diagnosis of non-hypersensitivity AEFI). Among participants referred for AEFIs following COVID-19 vaccination, 166/180 (92.2%) were recommended for COVID-19 revaccination after risk assessment, of whom 158/166 (95.2%) were revaccinated (all with a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine). After revaccination, 1/15 (6.7%) participants with prior anaphylaxis, 1/77 (1.3%) with immediate hypersensitivity not meeting criteria for anaphylaxis and 1/24 (4.2%) with other physician diagnosed hypersensitivity developed recurrent AEFI symptoms that met the BCCD for anaphylaxis. All 26 participants referred pre-vaccination, including 9 (34.6%) with history of polyethylene glycol-asparaginase reactions, were vaccinated without occurrence of immediate hypersensitivity symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Most individuals in this national cohort who experienced a hypersensitivity event following COVID-19 vaccination and were referred for specialist review were revaccinated without AEFI recurrence, suggesting that specialist evaluation can facilitate safe revaccination.

authors

  • Fitzpatrick, Tiffany
  • Yamoah, Peter
  • Lacuesta, Gina
  • Sadarangani, Manish
  • Cook, Victoria
  • Pourshahnazari, Persia
  • Kalicinsky, Chrystyna
  • Upton, Julia EM
  • Cameron, Scott B
  • Zaborniak, Karver
  • Kanani, Amin
  • Lam, Godfrey
  • Burton, Catherine
  • Constantinescu, Cora
  • Pernica, Jeffrey
  • Abdurrahman, Zainab
  • Betschel, Stephen
  • Drolet, Jean-Philippe
  • De Serres, Gaston
  • Quach, Caroline
  • Des Roches, Anne
  • Chapdelaine, Hugo
  • Salvadori, Marina I
  • Carignan, Alex
  • McConnell, Athena
  • Pham-Huy, Anne
  • Buchan, C Arianne
  • Cowan, Juthaporn
  • Hildebrand, Kyla
  • Top, Karina A

publication date

  • June 2024