| Literature DB >> 35062796 |
Seyed Massood Nabavi1,2, Mehrnoosh Mehrabani1, Leila Ghalichi1,3, Mohammad Ali Nahayati4, Mehran Ghaffari5, Fereshteh Ashtari6, Seyed Ehsan Mohammadianinejad7, Shahedeh Karimi1,2, Leila Faghani1, Sepideh Yazdanbakhsh1, Abbas Najafian1, Koorosh Shahpasand8, Massoud Vosough1,2.
Abstract
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic, predominantly immune-mediated degenerative disease of the central nervous system. Due to prolonged use of immunomodulatory and immunosuppressive medications, vaccine hesitancy could be common among MS patients. Our main aim in the current study was to evaluate the willingness and acceptability of COVID-19 vaccination in patients with MS. In our multicenter cross-sectional questionnaire-based clinical study, 892 patients completed the questionnaire between May to June 2021. The questionnaire consisted of demographic data, MS disease-related factors, history of COVID-19 infection/vaccination, and any existing comorbidities. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS software version 19. Overall, 68% of the participants expressed willingness to be vaccinated. Major causes of vaccine refusal in our patients were the fear of reducing the efficacy of disease modifying drugs (DMDs) upon vaccination as well as distrusting the vaccines and overestimation bias in the power of their innate immunity and potential COVID-19 resistance. Some demographic factors affected vaccination enthusiasm in our study. Our findings did not show significant correlation between the age and comorbidity and vaccine willingness. Only one-third of our patients received their vaccine information from healthcare providers. The majority of them received these data from official broadcasting channels and social media. However, despite several concerns, the willingness of COVD-19 vaccination in the Iranian MS patients is remarkable.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 vaccination; multiple sclerosis; vaccine acceptability; vaccine hesitancy; vaccine willingness
Year: 2022 PMID: 35062796 PMCID: PMC8778456 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines10010135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Distribution of vaccine willingness based on characteristics of Multiple Sclerosis patients.
| Low | High | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Male | 16 | 8.6% | 170 | 91.4% | 0.12 |
| Female | 102 | 15.2% | 571 | 84.8% | ||
|
| Married | 68 | 12.3% | 487 | 87.7% | 0.07 |
| Single | 50 | 16.7 | 250 | 83.3% | ||
|
| Relapsing | 92 | 13.0% | 613 | 87.0% | 0.15 |
| Progressive | 26 | 17.6% | 122 | 82.4% | ||
|
| 0–3.5 | 92 | 13.6% | 585 | 86.4% | 0.77 |
| 4–5.5 | 18 | 13.8% | 112 | 86.2 | ||
| ≥6 | 8 | 17.4% | 38 | 82.6% | ||
|
| No DMF | 12 | 22.6% | 41 | 77.4% | 0.08 |
| DMF 1 | 52 | 12.0% | 381 | 88% | ||
| DMF 2 | 40 | 14.9% | 229 | 85.1% | ||
|
| No | 61 | 17.3% | 292 | 82.7% | 0.02 |
| Yes | 58 | 11.5% | 445 | 88.5% | ||
|
| No | 83 | 15.3% | 461 | 84.7% | 0.03 |
| Yes | 30 | 9.9% | 274 | 90.1 | ||
|
| No | 91 | 14.6% | 533 | 85.4% | 0.87 |
| Yes | 26 | 14.1% | 158 | 85.9% | ||
|
| No | 94 | 13.4% | 607 | 86.6% | 0.23 |
| yes | 19 | 17.8% | 88 | 82.2% | ||
|
| No | 62 | 24.5% | 191 | 75.5% | <0.001 |
| Yes | 54 | 9.2% | 532 | 90.8% | ||
|
| No | 82 | 22.1% | 289 | 77.9% | <0.001 |
| yes | 33 | 7.2% | 427 | 92.8% | ||
|
| Interaction with MS medications | 18 | 16.5% | 91 | 83.5% | <0.001 |
| Vaccines inefficiency | 45 | 67.2% | 22 | 32.8% | ||
| Disease deterioration after vaccination | 16 | 41.0% | 23 | 59.0% | ||
| Innate resistance | 13 | 32.5% | 27 | 67.5% | ||
| Not believing in COVID-19 | 5 | 62.%% | 3 | 37.5% | ||
DMD: Disease modifying drugs; EDSS: Expanded disability status scale.
Logistic regression model for variables predicting vaccine willingness.
| OR | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Male gender | 2.1 | 1.2–3.8 | 0.015 |
| University education level | 1.6 | 1.1–2.5 | 0.021 |
| Marital status, married | 1.5 | 1.0–2.3 | 0.048 |
CI: Confidence interval; OR: Odds ratio.