| Literature DB >> 32814840 |
Heinz Ludwig1, Mario Boccadoro2, Philippe Moreau3, Jesus San-Miguel4, Michele Cavo5, Charlotte Pawlyn6, Sonja Zweegman7, Thierry Facon8, Christoph Driessen9, Roman Hajek10, Melitios A Dimopoulos11, Francesca Gay2, Hervé Avet-Loiseau12, Evangelos Terpos11, Niklas Zojer13, Mohamad Mohty14, Maria-Victoria Mateos15, Hermann Einsele16, Michel Delforge17, Jo Caers18, Katja Weisel19, Graham Jackson20, Laurent Garderet21, Monika Engelhardt22, Niels van de Donk7, Xavier Leleu23, Hartmut Goldschmidt24, Meral Beksac25, Inger Nijhof7, Niels Abildgaard26, Sara Bringhen2, Pieter Sonneveld27.
Abstract
Vaccination is one of the most successful medical interventions that has saved the life of millions of people. Vaccination is particularly important in patients with multiple myeloma, who have an increased risk of infections due to the disease-inherent immune suppression, and because of the immune suppressive effects of therapy. Hence, all appropriate measures should be exploited, to elicit an effective immune response to common pathogens like influenza, pneumococci, varicella zoster virus, and to those bacteria and viruses (haemophilus influenzae, meningococci, and hepatitis) that frequently may pose a significant risk to patients with multiple myeloma. Patients after autologous, and specifically after allogeneic transplantation have severely reduced antibody titers, and therefore require a broader spectrum of vaccinations. Response to vaccination in myeloma often is less vigorous than in the general population, mandating either measurement of the postvaccination antibody titers and/or repeating the vaccination. Here, we compile the existing data on vaccination in multiple myeloma and provide recommendations for clinical practice.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32814840 PMCID: PMC7787974 DOI: 10.1038/s41375-020-01016-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leukemia ISSN: 0887-6924 Impact factor: 11.528