| Literature DB >> 31863808 |
Paul J Turner1, Louise Fleming2, Sejal Saglani2, Jo Southern3, Nick J Andrews3, Elizabeth Miller3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) is recommended for annual influenza vaccination in children from age 2 years. However, some guidelines recommend against its use in children with asthma or recurrent wheeze due to concerns over its potential to induce wheezing.Entities:
Keywords: Asthma; children; immunization; influenza; live attenuated influenza vaccine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31863808 PMCID: PMC7156909 DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2019.12.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Allergy Clin Immunol ISSN: 0091-6749 Impact factor: 10.793
Baseline demographic characteristics of the cohort by severity definition
| Characteristic | Age (y) | Overall cohort | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2-4 | 5-11 | 12+ | ||
| Sex: male | 52 (61) | 151 (64) | 85 (54) | 288 (60) |
| Baseline lung function | ||||
| FEV1 (% predicted), median (IQR) | NA | 91 (78-102) | 92 (80-99) | NA |
| (n = 138) | (n = 122) | |||
| PEFR (% predicted), median (IQR) | NA | 87 (75-101) | 91 (85-100) | NA |
| (n = 58) | (n = 48) | |||
| Baseline asthma control score, median (IQR) | ||||
| TRACK | 55 (35-65) | NA | NA | NA |
| (c)ACT | NA | 19 (15-22) | 19 (16-22) | |
| ACQ | NA | 6 (2-12) | 6 (3-11) | |
| Previous influenza vaccination | 41 (48) | 186 (79) | 120 (76) | 332 (69) |
| Previous LAIV | 24 (28) | 134 (57) | 64 (41) | 222 (46) |
| Asthma severity | ||||
| “Persistent poor control” | ||||
| Age 2-4 y: ICS >200 μg + LTRA or ≥2 exacerbations in past year requiring oral steroids/hospitalization | 68 (80) | 88 (37) | 73 (46) | 229 (48) |
| Age 5-11 y: ICS ≥ 400 μg/d | ||||
| Age 12+y: ICS ≥ 800 μg/d | ||||
| High-dose ICSs, n (%) | ||||
| Age 2-4 y: ICS ≥ 400 μg/d | 48 (57) | 63 (27) | 97 (61) | 208 (44) |
| Age 5+ y: ICS ≥ 800 μg/d | ||||
| Severe asthma (according to ATS/ERS guidelines) | ||||
| High-dose ICS AND at least 1 of: | NA | 51 (22) | 71 (45) | 122 (31 |
| ACT score <20 | ||||
| ≥2 courses of systemic steroids in the past year | ||||
| Serious exacerbation (hospital admission in last year) | ||||
| FEV1 <80% | ||||
| “Difficult asthma”: persistence of symptoms despite treatment with high-dose therapies | 54 (64) | 46 (20) | 42 (27) | 142 (30) |
ATS, American Thoracic Society; ERS, European Respiratory Society; IQR, interquartile range; LTRA, leukotriene receptor antagonist; NA, not applicable/available; PEFR, peak expiratory flow rate.
Values are n (%) unless otherwise indicated.
Excluding study participants <5 years.
Fig 1Participant flow diagram. Thirteen children had consent but were not eligible for the study: 6 due to recent antihistamine use (family declined a further study appointment); 5 refused after parental consent had been obtained; 2 with unstable asthma (and who were given IIV instead).
Comparison between those subjects with follow-up data relating to asthma control at 4 weeks and those without
| Characteristic | Subjects with follow-up data (n = 319) | Subjects without follow-up data (n = 159) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (y) | |||
| 2-4 | 60 (19) | 25 (16) | .65 |
| 5-11 | 157 (49) | 78 (49) | |
| 12+ | 102 (32) | 56 (35) | |
| Sex: male | 190 (60) | 98 (62) | .69 |
| Baseline asthma control score, median (IQR) | |||
| TRACK (age 2-4 y) | 50 (30-65) | 60 (38-75) | .20 |
| (c)ACT (age 5-11 y) | 19 (16-22) | 19 (13-23) | .34 |
| ACT (age 12+ y) | 19 (17-22) | 19 (14-22) | .16 |
| ACQ (age 5+ y) | 6 (2-10) | 6 (2-13) | .24 |
| Receiving high-dose ICSs | |||
| Age 2-4 y: ICS ≥ 400 μg/d | 33 (10) | 15 (9) | .87 |
| Age 5-11 y: ICS ≥ 800 μg/d | 40 (13) | 23 (14) | .57 |
| Age 12+ y: ICS ≥ 800 μg/d | 54 (17) | 43 (27) | .01 |
| Previous influenza vaccination | 225 (71) | 107 (67) | .53 |
| Previous LAIV | 156 (49) | 66 (42) | .14 |
IQR, Interquartile range.
Values are n (%) unless otherwise indicated.
Fig 2Change in ACT score at 4 weeks post-LAIV, compared with baseline, in children older than 5 years with a history of asthma.
Change in symptom control ≥minimum important difference for study population (and by severity definition) where this resulted in a change in symptom control from well controlled to suboptimal (or vice versa)
| Population | n | Improved | No change | Worse | McNemar |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Complete cohort | |||||
| All ages | 319 | 28 (9) | 254 (80) | 37 (12) | .26 |
| 2-4 y | 60 | 3 (5) | 49 (82) | 8 (13) | .13 |
| 5+ y | 259 | 25 (10) | 205 (79) | 29 (11) | .59 |
| “Persistent poor control” | |||||
| All ages | 147 | 12 (8) | 118 (80) | 17 (12) | .35 |
| 2-4 y | 45 | 3 (7) | 37 (82) | 5 (11) | .48 |
| 5+ y | 102 | 9 (9) | 81 (79) | 12 (12) | .51 |
| High-dose ICS | |||||
| All ages | 127 | 8 (6) | 106 (83) | 13 (10) | .26 |
| 2-4 y | 33 | 2 (6) | 29 (88) | 2 (6) | 1.00 |
| 5+ y | 94 | 6 (6) | 77 (82) | 11 (12) | .23 |
| “Difficult asthma” | |||||
| All ages | 90 | 7 (8) | 79 (88) | 4 (4) | .37 |
| 2-4 y | 37 | 3 (8) | 30 (81) | 4 (11) | .71 |
| 5+ y | 53 | 4 (8) | 49 (92) | 0 (0) | .05 |
Values are n (%).
This severity definition is partially dependent on the (c)ACT score, so this P value may be influenced by regression to the mean.
Change in symptom control ≥minimum important difference for study population, and by severity definition
| Population | n | Improved | No change | Worse | McNemar |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Complete cohort | |||||
| All ages | 319 | 77 (24) | 148 (46) | 94 (29) | .14 |
| 2-4 y | 60 | 19 (32) | 17 (28) | 24 (40) | .54 |
| 5+ y | 259 | 58 (22) | 131 (51) | 70 (27) | .18 |
| 5-11 y | 157 | 40 (25) | 76 (48) | 41 (26) | .71 |
| 12+ y | 102 | 18 (18) | 55 (54) | 29 (28) | .08 |
| “Persistent poor control” | |||||
| All ages | 147 | 42 (29) | 54 (37) | 51 (35) | .46 |
| 2-4 y | 45 | 17 (38) | 10 (22) | 18 (40) | .95 |
| 5+ y | 102 | 25 (25) | 44 (43) | 33 (32) | .32 |
| 5-11 y | 56 | 15 (27) | 25 (45) | 16 (29) | .83 |
| 12+ y | 46 | 10 (22) | 19 (41) | 17 (37) | .24 |
| High-dose ICS | |||||
| All ages | 127 | 35 (28) | 50 (39) | 42 (33) | .46 |
| 2-4 y | 33 | 13 (39) | 7 (21) | 13 (39) | .84 |
| 5+ y | 94 | 22 (23) | 43 (46) | 29 (31) | .26 |
| 5-11 y | 40 | 12 (30) | 19 (48) | 9 (22) | .63 |
| 12+ y | 54 | 10 (19) | 24 (44) | 20 (37) | .07 |
| “Difficult asthma” | |||||
| All ages | 90 | 34 (38) | 31 (34) | 25 (28) | .30 |
| 2-4 y | 37 | 15 (41) | 9 (24) | 13 (35) | .58 |
| 5+ y | 53 | 19 (36) | 22 (42) | 12 (23) | .23 |
| 5-11 y | 24 | 10 (42) | 9 (38) | 5 (21) | .21 |
| 12+ y | 29 | 9 (31) | 13 (45) | 7 (24) | .62 |
Values are n (%).
This severity definition is partially dependent on the (c)ACT score, so this P value may be influenced by regression to the mean.
Fig 3Change in TRACK score at 4 weeks post-LAIV, compared with baseline, in children aged 2 to 4 years with a history of recurrent wheeze.
AEFI reported within 2 h of LAIV administration
| No. | Time to symptoms (min) | Description of events | IDMC review: possible allergic etiology? | Causality (due to LAIV) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 20-60 | Mild itchy facial rash; no recurrence with second dose of LAIV given 1 mo later | Yes | Unlikely |
| 2 | 5-20 | Mild generalized pruritus, no rash | Yes | Possible |
| 3 | 5-20 | Itchy facial rash | Yes | Probable |
| 4 | 20-60 | Rhinitis, facial hives, and mild angioedema. Possible causation due to exposure to a food allergen | Yes | Unlikely |
| 5 | 5-20 | Localized urticaria to nasal bridge and mild upper-lip swelling | Yes | Probable |
| 6 | 5-20 | Nausea | No | |
| 7 | 5-20 | Itchy nose | No | |
| 8 | 20-60 | Occasional sniffing | No | |
| 9 | 20-60 | Generalized mild rash and itchy throat. No other symptoms. Frequently develops similar symptoms due to environmental exposure | Yes | Unlikely |
AEFI, Adverse event following immunization.
Delayed AEs occurring up to 72 hours after LAIV immunization, as reported by parents from 440 children with 72-hour follow-up
| AE | No. of children | Rate (95% CI) in this cohort |
|---|---|---|
| Upper respiratory tract | ||
| Upper respiratory tract (any) | 55 | 12.5% (9.6%-16.0%) |
| Isolated symptoms only, <24-h duration | 23 | 5.2% (3.3%-7.7%) |
| Isolated symptoms only, >24-h duration | 31 | 7.1% (4.8%-9.9%) |
| Nasal symptoms with ocular involvement | 1 | 0.2% (0.1%-1.3%) |
| Lower respiratory tract | ||
| Lower respiratory tract (any) | 56 | 12.7% (9.8%-16.2%) |
| Parent-reported wheeze | 28 | 6.4% (4.3%-9.1%) |
| Constitutional | ||
| Any | 58 | 13.2% (10.2%-16.7%) |
| Fever <24 h | 10 | 2.3% (1.1%-4.1%) |
| Fever >24 h | 7 | 1.6% (0.6%-3.3%) |
| Other: lethargy, headache, dizziness, myalgia | 42 | 9.6% (7.0%-12.7%) |
| Dermatological | ||
| Flare in eczema | 3 | 0.7% (0.1%-2.0%) |
| Nonspecific rash, no response to antihistamine | 5 | 1.1% (0.4%-2.6%) |
| Abdominal symptoms | ||
| Vomiting, nausea, abdominal pain | 9 | 2.1% (0.9%-3.9%) |
| Loose stools | 2 | 0.5% (0.1%-1.6%) |
| Ear-nose-throat | ||
| Mild nose bleed | 3 | 0.7% (0.1%-2.0%) |
| Sore throat | 4 | 0.9% (0.3%-2.3%) |
| Ocular | ||
| Itch, redness | 1 | 0.2% (0.01%-1.3%) |
| Neurological | ||
| Any | 0 | 0% (0.0%-0.8%) |
| Cardiovascular | ||
| Any | 0 | 0% (0.0%-0.8%) |
Relationship between the occurrence of delayed events (in the 72 hours after LAIV) and baseline characteristics
| Factor | Level | All delayed AEs | Lower respiratory tract AEs only | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | Median, IQR | 8.7 (5.0-12.3) | .02 | 7.8 (4.2-11.9) | .01 |
| Age 2-4 y | 35 of 77 (45%) | 18 of 77 (23%) | |||
| Age 5-11 y | 65 of 220 (30%) | 24 of 220 (11%) | |||
| Age 12+ y | 39 of 143 (27%) | 14 of 143 (10%) | |||
| Baseline (c)ACT or TRACK score | Q1 | 34 of 92 (37%) | .12 | 12 of 92 (13%) | .77 |
| Q2 | 33 of 97 (34%) | 15 of 97 (15%) | |||
| Q3 | 44 of 145 (30%) | 17 of 145 (12%) | |||
| Q4 | 28 of 103 (27%) | 12 of 103 (12%) | |||
| Lung function (FEV1 or PEFR) | >95% | 30 of 106 (28%) | .59 | 12 of 106 (11%) | .97 |
| 95%-90% | 12 of 38 (32%) | 4 of 38 (11%) | |||
| 89%-90% | 14 of 55 (25%) | 3 of 55 (5%) | |||
| 79%-70% | 9 of 36 (25%) | 6 of 36 (17%) | |||
| 69%-60% | 7 of 20 (35%) | 1 of 20 (5%) | |||
| 59%-50% | 4 of 10 (40%) | 2 of 10 (20%) | |||
| <50% | 1 of 2 (50%) | 0 of 2 (0%) | |||
| Baseline ACQ score | 0-4 | 41 of 160 (26%) | .22 | 14 of 160 (9%) | .23 |
| 5-9 | 28 of 94 (30%) | 10 of 94 (11%) | |||
| 10-14 | 20 of 58 (34%) | 11 of 58 (19%) | |||
| 15-19 | 6 of 30 (20%) | 1 of 30 (3%) | |||
| 20-24 | 8 of 17 (47%) | 2 of 17 (12%) | |||
| 25-30 | 1 of 3 (33%) | 0 of 3 (0%) | |||
| “Persistent poor control” | No | 70 of 235 (30%) | .41 | 26 of 235 (11%) | .31 |
| Yes | 69 of 205 (34%) | 30 of 205 (15%) | |||
| High-dose ICS | No | 73 of 257 (28%) | .10 | 28 of 257 (11%) | .19 |
| Yes | 66 of 183 (36%) | 28 of 183 (15%) | |||
| “Difficult asthma” | No | 97 of 316 (31%) | .57 | 35 of 316 (11%) | .11 |
| Yes | 42 of 124 (34%) | 21 of 124 (17%) | |||
| Atopic status | |||||
| Eczema | No | 64 of 224 (29%) | .18 | 31 of 224 (14%) | .57 |
| Yes | 75 of 216 (35%) | 25 of 216 (12%) | |||
| Allergic rhinitis | No | 46 of 168 (27%) | .14 | 21 of 168 (13%) | 1.0 |
| Yes | 93 of 272 (34%) | 35 of 272 (13%) | |||
| IgE-mediated food allergy | No | 79 of 239 (33%) | .54 | 34 of 239 (14%) | .32 |
| Yes | 60 of 201 (30%) | 22 of 201 (11%) | |||
| Previous influenza vaccine | No | 42 of 119 (35%) | .42 | 13 of 119 (11%) | .63 |
| Yes | 96 of 308 (31%) | 41 of 308 (13%) |
PEFR, Peak expiratory flow rate.
Four children met the criteria for severe exacerbation within 72 hours, aged 3, 4, 7, and 15 years; 3 had coexisting atopy, and 2 (aged 3 and 7 years) had previously received LAIV.
Data analyzed in quartiles, for ACT this was <15,15-18,19-22, and ≥23; for TRACK, <35, 35-50, 55-65, and ≥70.
Trend test across categories.
Serious AEs reported during the study
| No. | Description of event | Causal relationship | Expected (Y/N) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Subject with severe asthma developed viral symptoms and wheeze 1 wk post-LAIV. Assessed in hospital: oxygen saturations 94% in room air. Admitted for 3 d observation, no change in medical management instituted | Probable | Y |
| 2 | Subject with severe asthma noted to have possible early signs of chest infection noted at assessment pre-LAIV, and oral antibiotics commenced. LAIV administered after review by local Investigator. Three days later, subject presented to local hospital with increased wheeze and breathlessness, and admitted for 3 d. Treated with nebulized salbutamol and intravenous antibiotics | Possible | Y |
| 3 | Subject with severe asthma; 19 d after LAIV, asthma exacerbation and was admitted to hospital overnight for hourly nebulizers, magnesium sulfate, and intravenous antibiotics. Discharged the next day | Unlikely | Y |
| 4 | Subject has severe asthma, previous HDU admissions, tolerated LAIV in previous years. Three weeks after LAIV, developed increasing wheeze/cough, prompting presentation to hospital on day 3 of illness. Diagnosed with asthma exacerbation and admitted to HDU, given magnesium sulphate, aminophylline, steroids, and nebulized salbutamol. No antibiotics started. No virology sent, blood studies demonstrated neutrophilia with elevated CRP (48 mg/L). No focal abnormality on chest x-ray. Discharged home after 48 h | Unlikely | Y |
CRP, C-reactive protein; HDU, high dependency unit; IDMC, Independent Data Monitoring Committee; N, no; PI, principal investigator; Y, yes.
IDMC ascribed unlikely due to very low probability of ongoing viral shedding 3 weeks after LAIV.