| Literature DB >> 34106430 |
Reinhart Speeckaert1, Jo Lambert2, Luis Puig3, Marijn Speeckaert4, Hilde Lapeere2, Sofie De Schepper2, Nanja van Geel2.
Abstract
Large-scale vaccination strategies are currently being deployed against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-Cov-2). Whether systemic medication for skin diseases affects the efficacy of vaccination and whether temporary interruption or extension of the dosing interval is necessary is under debate. Most immunomodulating/immunosuppressive drugs only affect vaccine-induced immune responses to a limited or moderate extent, preserving sufficient immunity in most patients. Mycophenolate mofetil, Janus kinase inhibitors, and rituximab require a more cautious approach, and judicious timing of vaccination might be appropriate in patients receiving these treatments. It should be noted that, for most drugs except methotrexate, data on the length of the interruption period to restore vaccine-induced immune responses to normal levels are either very limited or absent. In these cases, only the drug half-life can be used as a practical guideline. In most patients, systemic medication can be continued through the vaccination process, although case-by-case decisions can be considered.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34106430 PMCID: PMC8188745 DOI: 10.1007/s40268-021-00349-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs R D ISSN: 1174-5886
Fig. 1Working mechanism of mRNA-based vaccines for SARS-CoV-2 and the main pathways where immunosuppressive/immunomodulating treatments interact. CD cluster of differentiation, CYCLO cyclosporin, IL-17i interleukin-17-inhibitors or receptor blockers, IL-23i interleukin-23 inhibitors, JAKi JAK inhibitors, MMF mycophenolate mofetil, mRNA messenger RNA, MTX methotrexate, RITU rituximab, SARS-CoV-2 severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2, Th17 Type 17 T-helper cell
Efficacy and practical information for systemic medication regarding SARS-Cov-2 vaccination for skin disorders
| Drug | Half-life | 94% elimination (4 × half-life) | Reduced efficacy of vaccination | What can we say to our patients? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Methotrexate | 3–15 h | 12–60 h | Mild–moderate | Vaccine-induced immunity is decreased but expected to be sufficient in most patients [ |
| Stopping treatment for 2 weeks after vaccination has successfully increased the efficacy of influenza vaccination [ | ||||
| Cyclosporine | 18 h | 72 h | Mild–moderate | Vaccine-induced immunity is decreased but expected to be sufficient in most patients [ |
| Cyclosporine has a short half-life. Temporary interruption (e.g., stop 3 days before vaccination and ≥2 weeks after vaccination) might increase the efficacy of vaccination, but RWE is lacking | ||||
| Mycophenolate mofetil | 15–18 h | 60–72 h | Moderate–severe | Decreased antibody titers after vaccination are likely [ |
| Temporary interruption (e.g., stop 3 days before vaccination and ≥ 2 weeks after vaccination) might increase the efficacy of vaccination, but RWE is lacking | ||||
| Corticosteroids | 2–4 h | 8–16 h | Mild | Vaccination responses are adequate in most patients [ |
| Dimethyl fumarate | 1 h | 4h | No–mild | Vaccination responses are adequate in most patients [ |
| Apremilast | 6–9 h | 24–36h | Unknown | No data are available, but normal responses are expected |
| Azathioprine | 3–5 h | 12–20h | Mild | Vaccination responses are adequate in most patients [ |
JAK inhibitors (tofacitinib; baricitinib) | 3 h; 12.5 h | 12h; 50h | Severe | Diminished responses have been reported, but most patients can still mount sufficient immunity [ |
| A 2-week interruption (1 week before and 1 week after vaccination) seems ineffective for reversing the decreased vaccine responses [ | ||||
| TNF-α blockers | 4–20 d | 16–80d | Mild–moderate | Modestly impaired immunity after vaccination [ |
| Longer intervals and starting/stopping can cause reduced long-term efficacy, except for etanercept, which also has a short half-life | ||||
| Administration of vaccine midcycle or 2 weeks before the next dosage might be considered | ||||
| IL-17 inhibitors, IL-17 receptor blocker | 11–27 d | 44–108 d | No | Currently available vaccines (influenza, meningococcus) have excellent efficacy (only based on data for secukinumab and ixekizumab) [ |
| It is unclear whether the vaccine-induced protection (IgA) in the upper airways will be as effective as in healthy controls | ||||
| Ixekizumab and brodalumab have a moderately short half-life (13 and 11 days, respectively) | ||||
| No evidence is available about whether temporary interruption seems reasonable | ||||
| IL-23 inhibitors | 12–39 d | 48–156 d | No | Currently available vaccines (influenza, tetanus, meningococcus, pneumococcus) have excellent efficacy (based only on data for ustekinumab) [ |
| It is unclear whether the vaccine-induced protection (IgA) in the upper airways will be as effective as in healthy controls | ||||
| Long half-life | ||||
| No evidence is available as to whether temporary interruption seems reasonable in real life | ||||
| Dupilumab | NR | NR | No | Data suggest that COVID vaccination will be as effective as in normal individuals [ |
| Omalizumab | NR | NR | Unknown | No published data |
| No signals that vaccination is affected | ||||
| Rituximaba | NR | NR | Severe | Protective antibody formation is severely impaired [ |
| Cell-specific immunity is likely largely preserved | ||||
| Given the partial recuperation of B cells after 6–10 months, this time period is preferable for vaccination |
COVID coronavirus disease 2019, d days, IgA immunoglobulin A, IL interleukin, JAK Janus kinase, NR not relevant (the drug does not decrease the efficacy of vaccination), RWE real-world evidence, TNF tumor necrosis factor
aThe drug half-life of rituximab does not represent the duration of its immunologic effect
| For most patients receiving immune-based treatments for inflammatory skin disorders, the therapy can be continued without affecting protective vaccine-induced immunity. |
| For some drugs, temporary treatment interruption or administration of the vaccine at the optimal period according to the pharmacokinetics of the drug and the individual level of disease control can be considered. |