| Literature DB >> 29861734 |
Ahmad AlEnizi1, Khaled AlSaeid2, Adel Alawadhi2, Eiman Hasan3, Entesar H Husain4, Ahmad AlFadhli5, Aqeel Ghanem5, Fatemah Abutiban1, Yaser Ali5, Adeeba Al-Herz3, Khuloud Mohammed6, Waleed Alkandari6, Ali Aldei3, Hebah Alhajeri5, Ahmad Dehrab7, Sawsan Hayat5.
Abstract
People with IRD are at increased risk of infection, and in 2011 EULAR made general recommendations for vaccination in these patients. Global and European perspectives are important, but they cannot accurately reflect the individual situations of patients in different countries and regions. Based on our clinical experience and opinions, we have sought to tailor the original EULAR recommendations to include advice for vaccination with new agents approved in the intervening years-including the new class of targeted synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs. We have also considered the specific demographic needs of patients in local populations in the Gulf region. The resulting 16 recommendations are grouped into four main categories covering general vaccination guidelines and best-practice for all patients with IRD, followed by a set of recommended vaccines against specific pathogens. The last two categories include recommendations for certain patient subgroups with defined risks and for patients who wish to travel.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29861734 PMCID: PMC5971308 DOI: 10.1155/2018/5217461
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Rheumatol ISSN: 1687-9260
Box 1Inflammatory rheumatic diseases [8].
Box 2Vaccine overview.
Rates of vaccine-preventable disease in Kuwait.
| Disease | |
|---|---|
| Pneumococcal disease | 5/100,000 annually [ |
| Influenza | 10–20 per 100,000 population annually [ |
| Tetanus | 0 [ |
| Hepatitis B | 2–5% [ |
| Herpes zoster | 0.55% [ |
| Human papilloma virus | 2.3% [ |
| Meningitis | 0.5 per 100,000 population annually [ |
There have been no reported cases of tetanus in Kuwait since 1990. In women with normal cervical cytology.
Recommendations for vaccination in IRD.
| Recommendation | Median agreement by DELPHI voting on a scale of 0–9 (IQR) | |
|---|---|---|
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| 1 | Vaccination status (including varicella and HBsAb) should be assessed in the initial investigation of patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease | 9 (1) |
| 2 | Vaccination should be administered 2–4 weeks before starting immunosuppressive therapy in patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease and ideally only during stable disease | 9 (0) |
| 3 | Vaccination of patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease should be carried out by the treating rheumatologist or in collaboration with public health physicians | 9 (2) |
| 4 | Live attenuated vaccines should be avoided in immunosuppressed patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease and those receiving biologic therapy and targeted synthetic DMARDs | 9 (1) |
| 5 | Nonlive attenuated vaccines can be administered alongside conventional synthetic DMARDs and TNF | 9 (1) |
| 6 | The household members of immunocompromised patients can safely receive inactivated vaccines. Household members should be up to date and vaccinated on their recommended vaccines, especially influenza, varicella, and MMR. Inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) should be used instead of the oral live vaccine. Rotavirus vaccines should be avoided in household members of IRD patients receiving biologic therapy | 9 (1) |
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| 7 | Nonlive influenza vaccination should be strongly considered for patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease. The updated influenza vaccine should be given annually in all patients with autoimmune inflammatory disease | 9 (1) |
| 8 | Pneumococcal vaccination should be strongly considered for all patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases | 9 (0) |
| 9 | Patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease should receive tetanus toxoid vaccination in accordance with Kuwaiti MOH recommendations for the general population. In case of major and/or contaminated wounds in patients who received rituximab within the last 24 weeks, passive immunisation with tetanus immunoglobulin should be administered | 9 (1) |
| 10 | Hepatitis B is endemic in Kuwait. It is recommended that all patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases be screened for hepatitis B and vaccinated as required | 9 (1) |
| 11 | Varicella and zoster vaccines can be considered in patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease. Administration should be 2–4 weeks prior to initiation of conventional synthetic DMARDs, high-dose (>20 mg) steroids or biologic therapies, and targeted synthetic DMARDs | 9 (2) |
| 12 | BCG vaccination is not recommended in patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease | 8 (2) |
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| 13 | Pap smear test screening should be mandated for sexually active females; if indicated, HPV vaccination can be given in both male and female patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases | 9 (1) |
| 14 | In hyposplenic or asplenic patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease, nonlive influenza, | 9 (0) |
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| 15 | Patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases who plan to travel are recommended to receive their nonlive attenuated vaccines according to general Kuwaiti MOH and CDC rules. Live attenuated vaccines should be avoided in IRD patients on immunosuppression therapy | 9 (0) |
| 16 | Patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease who wish to undertake Hajj should receive meningococcal ACWY and pneumococcal vaccines within 10 days to 3 years prior to undertaking Hajj and seasonal nonlive influenza vaccine within 1 year | 9 (0) |
BCG: Bacillus Calmette-Guérin vaccine; CDC: Center for Disease Control; DMARD: disease-modifying antirheumatic drug; HPV: human papilloma virus; IQR: interquartile range; MOH: Ministry of Health; TNF: tumour necrosis factor.
Figure 1Recommendations for HBV screening and prophylaxis in patients to be administered with bDMARDs, tsDMARDs, or >7.5 mg/day prednisolone [29]. 1Treatment period is up until the patient becomes HBsAg negative in patients with chronic hepatitis B (liver disease), and antiviral treatment should continue 6–12 months after immunosuppressive and/or bDMARD treatment is completed in patients without liver disease (12 months for rituximab). 2If rituximab is to be administered, antiviral prophylaxis should be given, even if patients are negative for HBV DNA (−). 3HBV DNA is repeated once in 1–6 months (3 months on average). Figure reproduced with permission from the European Journal of Rheumatology.
Live vaccines during immunosuppressive therapy [40].
| Therapeutic agent | Herpes zoster/varicella vaccination | Mumps, measles, rubella (MMR), yellow fever vaccination |
|---|---|---|
| Low-dose systemic or topical corticosteroids: | No restrictions | No restrictions |
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| Methotrexate | ≤0.4 mg/kg/week (≤20 mg/week): vaccination possible | ≤0.4 mg/kg/week (≤20 mg/week): vaccination possible |
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| Azathioprine | ≤3.0 mg/kg/day: vaccination possible | Contraindication |
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| 6-Mercaptopurine | ≤1.5 mg/kg/day: vaccination possible | Contraindication |
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| Abatacept | Contraindication | Contraindication |
| Adalimumab | ||
| Anakinra | ||
| Certolizumab | ||
| Cyclosporine A | ||
| Cyclophosphamide | ||
| Etanercept | ||
| Golimumab | ||
| High-dose systemic steroids (≥20 mg per day of prednisone or equivalent for more than 2 weeks) | ||
| Infliximab | ||
| Leflunomide | ||
| Mycophenolate mofetil | ||
| Tacrolimus | ||
| Tocilizumab | ||
| Ustekinumab | ||
Table reproduced with permission from Swiss Medical Weekly—an open access publication of EMH published in accordance with the terms of the Creative Commons Licence Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International.
Vaccination schedule in IRD [58].
| Low immunosuppression | High immunosuppression | |
|---|---|---|
| Influenza | 1 dose annually | |
| Pneumococcal (polysaccharide or conjugate) | 1-2 doses | |
| Tetanus, diphtheria (Td) | Booster every 10 years | |
| Hepatitis B | 3 doses, 0, 1 and 6 months; double doses in high-risk patients initiating bDMARDs or medium/high-dose corticosteroids, depending on serological status | |
| Hepatitis A | 2 doses of vaccine (0 and 6 months) | |
| Varicella/herpes zoster | Considered in patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease. Administration should be 2–4 weeks prior to initiation of conventional synthetic DMARDs | |
| Measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) | Considered in mildly immunosuppressed patients on an individual basis | |
| Meningococcal (quadrivalent conjugate meningococcal vaccine) | 10 days before and up to 3 years before undertaking Hajj | |
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| 1 dose | |
| HPV | 2 or 3 doses |
Table reproduced with permission from the European Journal of Rheumatology.