| Literature DB >> 35474640 |
Jeffrey R Curtis1, Sindhu R Johnson2, Donald D Anthony3, Reuben J Arasaratnam4, Lindsey R Baden5, Anne R Bass6, Cassandra Calabrese7, Ellen M Gravallese5, Rafael Harpaz8, Andrew Kroger9, Rebecca E Sadun10, Amy S Turner11, Eleanor Anderson Williams12, Ted R Mikuls13.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To provide guidance to rheumatology providers on the use of COVID-19 vaccines for patients with rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases (RMDs).Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35474640 PMCID: PMC9082483 DOI: 10.1002/art.42109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Rheumatol ISSN: 2326-5191 Impact factor: 15.483
Foundational principles, assumptions, and considerations for the guidance statements*
| ACR guidance statements are not intended to supersede the judgment of rheumatology care providers nor override the values and perspectives of their patients. Guidance was, in some cases, based on weak and/or indirect evidence and required substantial extrapolation by an expert task force. All statements, therefore, should be considered conditional or provisional. The ACR is committed to updating this guidance document as new evidence emerges. |
| The rheumatology community lacks important knowledge on how to best maximize vaccine‐related benefits. RMD patients exhibit high variability with respect to their underlying health condition, disease severity, treatments, degree of multimorbidity, and relationship with their specialist provider. These considerations must be considered when individualizing care. |
| There is limited direct evidence about mRNA COVID‐19 vaccine safety and efficacy in RMD patients. There is no reason to expect vaccine harms will trump expected COVID‐19 vaccine benefits in RMD patients. |
| Evidence about the mRNA COVID‐19 vaccine suggests that the benefits outweigh the risks in RMD patients. |
| The risk of deferring vaccination and thus failing to mitigate COVID‐19 risk should be weighed against a possible blunted response to the vaccine if given under suboptimal circumstances. As a practical matter, this tension must be resolved in the context of imperfect prediction as to whether those circumstances may be transient as well as a paucity of scientific evidence. |
| Both individual and societal considerations related to a limited vaccine supply should be considered in issuing vaccine guidance and making policy decisions. Given that context, simplicity should be the touchstone: to avoid confusion, improve implementation, and maintain scientific credibility. |
| In the future, the ability to give vaccine boosters will no longer be constrained by limited supplies. Any vaccination strategy is a reasonable starting point, and decisions about implementation details reflect tradeoffs in the allocation of scarce vaccine resources. |
ACR = American College of Rheumatology; RMD = rheumatic and musculoskeletal disease.
General considerations related to COVID‐19 vaccination in patients with RMD*
| Statement domain | Guidance statement | Level of task force consensus |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical practice | The rheumatology health care provider is responsible for engaging the RMD patient in a discussion to assess COVID‐19 vaccination status. | Strong |
| Clinical practice | The rheumatology health care provider is responsible for engaging the RMD patient in a shared decision‐making process to discuss receiving the COVID‐19 vaccine. | Moderate |
| Epidemiology | AIIRD patients are at higher risk for incident viral infections compared to the general population. | Moderate |
| Epidemiology | After considering the influence of age and sex, AIIRD patients are at higher risk for COVID‐19 hospitalization compared to the general population. | Moderate |
| Epidemiology | Acknowledging heterogeneity due to disease‐ and treatment‐related factors, AIIRD patients have worse outcomes associated with COVID‐19 compared to the general population of similar age and sex. | Moderate |
| Epidemiology | Across AIIRD conditions, and within any specific disease, there is substantial variability in disease‐ and treatment‐related risk factors for COVID‐19 that may put some patients at higher risk than others. | Moderate |
| Public health | Based on increased risk for COVID‐19, AIIRD patients should be prioritized for vaccination before the nonprioritized general population of similar age and sex. | Moderate |
| Vaccine safety | Beyond known allergies to vaccine components, there are no known additional contraindications to COVID‐19 vaccination for AIIRD patients. | Moderate |
| Vaccine effectiveness | The expected response to COVID‐19 vaccination for many AIIRD patients receiving systemic immunomodulatory therapies is blunted in its magnitude and duration compared to the general population. | Moderate |
| Disease‐related | As a general principle, vaccination should optimally occur in the setting of well‐controlled AIIRD. | Moderate |
| Disease‐related | A potential risk exists for AIIRD flare or disease worsening following COVID‐19 vaccination. | Moderate |
| Vaccine safety | The benefit of COVID‐19 vaccination for RMD patients outweighs the potential risk for new‐onset autoimmunity. | Moderate |
RMD = rheumatic and musculoskeletal disease.
For examples of these autoimmune and inflammatory rheumatic disease (AIIRD) conditions, see Supplementary Table 1, on the Arthritis & Rheumatology website at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/art.42109.
Recommendations for primary and supplemental dosing of the COVID‐19 vaccine in RMD patients*
| Statement domain | Guidance statement | Level of task force consensus |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical practice | RMD patients should receive COVID‐19 vaccination, consistent with the age restriction of the EUA and/or FDA approval. | Strong |
| Clinical practice | RMD patients without an AIIRD who are receiving immunomodulatory therapy should be vaccinated in a similar manner as described in this guidance as AIIRD patients receiving those same treatments. | Moderate |
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| Vaccine effectiveness | For a multidose vaccine, AIIRD patients should receive the second dose of the same vaccine, even if there are nonserious adverse events associated with receipt of the first dose, consistent with timing described in CDC guidelines ( | Strong |
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| Clinical practice | Health care providers should not routinely order any laboratory testing (e.g., antibody tests for IgM and/or IgG to spike or nucleocapsid proteins) to assess immunity to COVID‐19 postvaccination, nor to assess the need for vaccination in an as‐yet‐unvaccinated person.‡ | Strong |
| Public health | Following COVID‐19 vaccination, RMD patients should continue to follow all public health guidelines regarding physical distancing and other preventive measures. | Strong |
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| Clinical practice/public health | Household members and other frequent close contacts of AIIRD patients should undergo COVID‐19 vaccination when available to them to facilitate a “cocooning effect” that may help protect the AIIRD patient. No priority for early vaccination is recommended for household members. | Moderate |
| Vaccine effectiveness/disease‐related | While vaccination would ideally occur in the setting of well‐controlled AIIRD, except for AIIRD patients with life‐threatening disease (e.g., in the ICU for any reason), COVID‐19 vaccination should occur as soon as possible for those for whom it is being recommended, irrespective of disease activity and severity. | Strong |
| Vaccine effectiveness/disease‐related | In AIIRD patients with life‐threatening disease (e.g., in the ICU for any reason), COVID‐19 vaccination should be deferred until their disease is better controlled. | Moderate |
| Vaccine effectiveness/disease‐related | AIIRD patients with active but non–life‐threatening disease should receive COVID‐19 vaccination. | Strong |
| Vaccine effectiveness/disease‐related | AIIRD patients with stable or low disease activity AIIRDs should receive COVID‐19 vaccination. | Strong |
| Vaccine effectiveness/disease‐related | AIIRD patients not receiving immunomodulatory treatments should receive the first dose of the COVID‐19 vaccine prior to initiation of immunomodulatory therapy when feasible. | Moderate |
Boldface text indicates updates that were added to the version 4 summary document at the end of 2021. RMD = rheumatic and musculoskeletal disease; EUA = Emergency Use Authorization; FDA = US Food and Drug Administration; AAIRD = autoimmune and inflammatory rheumatic disease; CDC = Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; ICU = intensive care unit.
Age ≥5 years as of October 29, 2021.
Given uncertainties in the interpretation of laboratory testing following vaccination as it would impact clinical decision‐making, the panel reaffirmed this statement in Version 4 of this guidance document.
The task force discussed the possibility of recommending additional and more sustained public health measures for patients with AIIRD. After deliberation, they did not elect to exceed current public health authority guidance given uncertainties about the clinical effectiveness of vaccination in such patients. The appropriateness for continued preventive measures (e.g., masking, physical distancing) should be discussed with patients as their rheumatology providers deem appropriate.
Guidance related to the use and timing of immunomodulatory therapies in relation to COVID‐19 vaccination administration in RMD patients*
| Medication(s) | Timing considerations for immunomodulatory therapy and vaccination | Level of task force consensus |
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| Acetaminophen, NSAIDs | Assuming that disease is stable, withhold for 24 hours prior to vaccination. No restrictions on use postvaccination if symptoms develop. | Moderate |
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This guidance applies to both primary vaccination and supplemental/booster dosing. Boldface text indicates updates that were added to the version 4 summary document at the end of 2021. For details on the history of updates to these guidance statements, see Supplementary Table 6, on the Arthritis & Rheumatology website at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/art.42109. RMD = rheumatic and musculoskeletal disease; IV = intravenous; SC = subcutaneous; NSAIDs = nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs; TNFi = tumor necrosis factor inhibitor.
Examples of cytokine inhibitors include the following: for interleukin‐6 receptor (IL‐6R), sarilumab and tocilizumab; for IL‐1 receptor antagonist (IL‐1Ra), anakinra and canakinumab; for IL‐17, ixekizumab and secukinumab; for IL‐12/IL‐23, ustekinumab; for IL‐23, guselkumab and rizankizumab.
Some practitioners measure CD19 B cells as a tool with which to time the booster and subsequent rituximab dosing. For those who elect to dose without such information, or for whom such measurement is not available or feasible, a supplemental vaccine dose 2–4 weeks should be provided before next anticipated rituximab dose (e.g., at month 5.0 or 5.5 in patients being administered rituximab every 6 months).
Includes apremilast, azathioprine, calcineurin inhibitors, cyclophosphamide (oral), IV immunoglobulin, leflunomide, methotrexate, JAK inhibitors (tofacitinib, upadacitinib, baricitinib), mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), and sulfasalazine.
Research agenda for future COVID‐19 vaccine studies in RMD patients proposed by the task force*
| Conduct clinical efficacy and laboratory‐based immunogenicity studies in RMD patients following vaccination, especially for AIIRD patients receiving certain immunomodulatory therapies (e.g., methotrexate, abatacept, JAK inhibitors, rituximab, mycophenolate, GCs). |
| Optimize response to primary vaccination and supplemental/booster dose by considering timing related to intentional short‐term cessation of certain immunomodulatory therapies (e.g., methotrexate, subcutaneous abatacept, JAK inhibitors, mycophenolate mofetil) to optimize vaccine response. |
| Evaluate risk of disease flare, disease worsening, and systemic reactogenicity following COVID‐19 vaccination in RMD patients, by disease and in relation to background immunomodulatory therapies. |
| Directly compare vaccines and vaccine platforms for the above efficacy, immunogenicity, and safety outcomes: notable given the potential for some COVID‐19 vaccines to achieve the minimum threshold for the FDA's EUA yet have seemingly lower vaccine efficacy based on large clinical trials in non‐RMD patients. |
| Long‐term follow‐up for durability and magnitude of vaccine protection in relation to various immunomodulatory medications, and as new SARS–CoV‐2 strains emerge. |
| Assess benefits and timing of additional COVID‐19 vaccine administration (i.e., booster doses). |
| Generate real‐world evidence (e.g., large pragmatic trial or observational studies) embedded in routine clinical practice to study the above topics, especially to promote large‐scale safety surveillance. |
| Establish a biorepository with associated clinical data infrastructure to facilitate future COVID‐19 (and possibly other) vaccine‐related research in RMD patients, considering the future potential to identify laboratory‐based correlates of protection relevant for individual patients. |
| Identify laboratory‐based serologic testing to identify patients with a suboptimal response to COVID‐19 vaccination who might be candidates for a booster dose or need to repeat the vaccination series. |
| Evaluate the impact of coadministration of the COVID‐19 vaccine given concurrently with other, non–live‐virus vaccines (e.g., shingles, influenza, pneumococcal) on vaccine immunogenicity and tolerability. |
| Optimize approaches to address vaccine hesitancy for high‐risk RMD patients who are reticent or unwilling to undergo vaccination, with particular attention to vulnerable populations (e.g., underrepresented racial/ethnic groups). |
| Identify COVID‐19 vaccine–induced immune parameters (immunogen‐specific neutralizing antibody levels, total immunogen‐specific antibody levels or isotypes, T cell immunity, innate immunity) or host determinants that are predictive of successful host response to vaccine, as reflected by protection from infection or mitigation of morbidity during subsequent infection. |
| Conduct large epidemiology studies of COVID‐19 outcomes (e.g., using large administrative databases of health plans, electronic health record data [e.g., the ACR RISE registry], or other data sources or methods) and examine the role of AIIRD disease features, treatments, and vaccination. While risk factors for incident disease may be shaped by confounding and unmeasured variability in exposure, examining outcomes conditioning on incident COVID‐19 diagnosis may be more fruitful. |
RMD = rheumatic and musculoskeletal disease; AIIRD = autoimmune and inflammatory rheumatic disease; GCs = glucocorticoids; FDA = US Food and Drug Administration; EUA = Emergency Use Authorization; ACR = American College of Rheumatology; RISE = Rheumatology Informatics System for Effectiveness.