| Literature DB >> 35696066 |
Nicoletta Luxi1, Alexia Giovanazzi1, Alessandra Arcolaci2, Patrizia Bonadonna3, Maria Angiola Crivellaro4, Paola Maria Cutroneo5, Carmen Ferrajolo6, Fabiana Furci2, Lucia Guidolin3, Ugo Moretti1, Elisa Olivieri3, Giuliana Petrelli1, Giovanna Zanoni2, Gianenrico Senna3, Gianluca Trifirò7.
Abstract
Conventional vaccines have been widely studied, along with their risk of causing allergic reactions. These generally consist of mild local reactions and only rarely severe anaphylaxis. Although all the current COVID-19 vaccines marketed in Europe have been shown to be safe overall in the general population, early post-marketing evidence has shown that mRNA-based vaccines using novel platforms (i.e., lipid nanoparticles) were associated with an increased risk of severe allergic reactions as compared to conventional vaccines. In this paper we performed an updated literature review on frequency, risk factors, and underlying mechanisms of COVID-19 vaccine-related allergies by searching MEDLINE and Google Scholar databases. We also conducted a qualitative search on VigiBase and EudraVigilance databases to identify reports of "Hypersensitivity" and "Anaphylactic reaction" potentially related to COVID-19 vaccines (Comirnaty, Spikevax, Vaxzevria and COVID-19 Janssen Vaccine), and in EudraVigilance to estimate the reporting rates of "Anaphylactic reaction" and "Anaphylactic shock" after COVID-19 vaccination in the European population. We also summarized the scientific societies' and regulatory agencies' recommendations for prevention and management of COVID-19 vaccine-related allergic reactions, especially in those with a history of allergy.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35696066 PMCID: PMC9190452 DOI: 10.1007/s40259-022-00536-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BioDrugs ISSN: 1173-8804 Impact factor: 7.744
Number of reports identified using SMQ “hypersensitivity” and SMQ “anaphylactic reaction” from VigiLyze®, stratified by age, sex and adverse reaction seriousness (data up to 14/12/2021)
| SMQ “hypersensitivity” | SMQ “anaphylactic reaction” | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Comirnaty | Spikevax | Vaxzevria | COVID-19 Janssen Vaccine | Comirnaty | Spikevax | Vaxzevria | COVID-19 Janssen Vaccine | |
| Sex, | ||||||||
| Female (F) | 38,204 (76.3) | 2385 (78.7) | 7761 (74.2) | 5669 (66.2) | 2729 (79.8) | 64 (82.0) | 432 (78.0) | 295 (53.8) |
| Male (M) | 11,334 (22.6) | 611 (20.2) | 2545 (24.3) | 2873 (33.5) | 629 (18.4) | 13 (16.7) | 110 (19.8) | 251 (45.8) |
| NS | 568 (1.1) | 33 (1.1) | 149 (1.5) | 23 (0.3) | 63 (1.8) | 1 (1.3) | 12 (2.2) | 2 (0.4) |
| F/M ratio | 3.4 | 3.9 | 3.0 | 2.0 | 4.3 | 4.9 | 3.9 | 1.2 |
| Age group (years), | ||||||||
| < 12 | 53 (0.1) | 7 (0.2) | 9 (0.1) | 8 (0.1) | 4 (0.1) | – | 2 (0.3) | – |
| 12–17 | 1728 (3.4) | 153 (5.1) | – | 11 (0.1) | 109 (3.2) | 1 (1.3) | – | 3 (0.6) |
| 18–44 | 21,247 (42.4) | 1613 (53.3) | 3068 (29.3) | 3664 (42.8) | 1564 (45.7) | 44 (56.4) | 207 (37.4) | 317 (57.8) |
| 45–64 | 17,074 (34.1) | 925 (30.5) | 4519 (43.2) | 3052 (35.6) | 1180 (34.5) | 20 (25.6) | 216 (39.0) | 123 (22.4) |
| > 65 | 7842 (15.7) | 259 (8.5) | 2394 (23.0) | 743 (8.7) | 416 (12.2) | 10 (12.8) | 106 (19.1) | 25 (4.6) |
| NS | 2162 (4.3) | 72 (2.4) | 465 (4.4) | 1087 (12.7) | 148 (4.3) | 3 (3.9) | 23 (4.2) | 80 (14.6) |
| Seriousness, | ||||||||
| Serious | 11,240 (22.4) | 751 (24.8) | 2414 (23.1) | 1226 (14.3) | 2467 (72.1) | 63 (80.8) | 367 (66.2) | 272 (49.6) |
| Not serious | 34,440 (68.7) | 2278 (75.2) | 8040 (76.9) | 7339 (85.7) | 910 (26.6) | 15 (19.2) | 187 (33.8) | 276 (50.4) |
| Unknown | 4426 (8.9) | – | 1 (<0.01) | – | 44 (1.3) | – | – | – |
Percentages are calculated based on the total number of reports by vaccine manufacturers
NS not specified; SMQ Standardized MedDRA Query
Potential risk factors for COVID-19 vaccine-related allergy as reported in post-marketing surveillance
| Authors | Reported potential risk factors for COVID-19 vaccine-related allergy |
|---|---|
| Shimabukuro et al. (2021) [ | Seventeen (81%) of 21 patients with anaphylaxis with Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine had a documented history of allergies (e.g., to drugs or medical products, foods, and insect stings) Seven (33%) had an episode of anaphylaxis in the past, including one after receipt of rabies vaccine and another after receipt of influenza A(H1N1) vaccine |
| Shimabukuro et al. (2021) [ | Twenty-one (32%) of the 66 case reports noted a prior episode of anaphylaxis from other exposures: vaccines (rabies, influenza A[H1N1], seasonal influenza, unspecified), contrast media, unspecified infusions, sulfa drugs, penicillin, prochlorperazine, latex, walnuts, unspecified tree nuts, jellyfish stings and unspecified exposures |
Klein et al. (2021) [ Iguchi et al. (2021) [ Shavit et al. (2021) [ Blumenthal et al. (2021) [ Shimabukuro et al. (2021) [ Risma et al. (2021) [ | All these studies reported a striking prevalence of COVID-19 vaccine-related allergic reactions in females |
| Risma et al. (2021) [ | Atopic individuals also appear to be overrepresented in those suffering anaphylaxes to the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines Another host factor that may impact the likelihood of anaphylaxis is stress |
| Caminati et al. (2021) [ | Only mild reactions, mainly local, after the administration of both doses, in patients with severe asthma Asthma remained under control between the two doses and quality of life improved |
| Rojas-Pérez-Ezquerra et al. (2021) [ | The COVID-19 vaccination, carried out in a specialized setting, was also well tolerated in patients with severe allergic conditions, such as hymenoptera, food, and drug allergy The only reaction recorded was a mild immediate reaction in a 43-year-old woman with a personal history of severe asthma |
| Fijen et al. (2021) [ | Good tolerability was reported in a population of 63 patients suffering from hereditary angioedema. After vaccination, 11 attacks were reported out of 111 administrations. All these attacks were mild, and patients recovered within 2 days |
Immunological mechanisms involved in drug-related hypersensitivity reactions, adapted from Dézsi et al. [108]
| Non-IgE-dependent mast cell activation (mast cells/basophils activation)a | Type I (mast cells/basophils activation) | Type II (IgG/inflammatory cells) | Type III (IC/inflammatory cells) | Type IV (lymphocytes) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Onset and clinical signs | Immediate; Anaphylactoid reactions | Immediate; Anaphylaxis U/A | Variable interval; Neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, hemolytic anemia | 1–3 weeks; serum sickness, vasculitis, glomerulonephritis | 48–72 h; contact dermatitis, SCARs, othersb | |||
| Way of activation | Physical intracellular | Receptor-mediated | Receptor-mediated | C activation through IgM or IgG binding to allergen on target cells | C activation by IC | Antigen presented by cells or direct T cells stimulation | ||
| Effector mechanism | Direct | CARPA (C5a, C3a ± IgM/IgG) | MRGCRX2 | FcεR, IgE | FcεR, C5aR, C3aR (ATR) IgE+C5a | IgM, IgG, C | Antigen-IgG, C | Macrophages, Eosinophils, T cells, Neutrophils |
| Mechanism classification | Pseudoallergy/ anaphylaxis-like | IgE allergy | Dual-triggered allergy | Cytotoxic | Immune complex | Cell-mediated | ||
ATR anaphylatoxins receptor, C complement, CARPA complement activation-related pseudoallergy, C3aR complement component fragment 3a receptor, C5aR complement component fragment 5a receptor, FcεR Fc epsilon receptor, HRs hypersensitivity reactions, IC immune complex, Ig immunoglobulin, MRGPRX2 Mas-related G protein-coupled receptor X2, U/A urticaria/angioedema
aNon-antibody and T-cell-mediated HRs underlie mechanisms that imply IgE-independent mast cell activation and were not included in Gell and Coombs classification; however, their clinical importance urges a revision of HRs classification to include also non-IgE-mediated direct and indirect activation of mast cells and basophils
bInterstitial nephritis, drug-induced hepatitis
Comprehensive view of topics from guidances issued by several international public health agencies and allergy-related organizations worldwide
Adapted from Greenhawt et al. [95]
Red boxes: contraindication; yellow boxes: precaution; green boxes: permitted; grey boxes: not mentioned
AAAAI American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology, ACAAI American College of Allergy Asthma and Immunology, ASCIA Australasian Society of Clinical Immunology and Allergy, CDC Centers for Disease Control and prevention, CSACI Canadian Society of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, EAACI European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, EMA European Medicine Agency, NACI National Advisory Committee on Immunization, PHE/BSACI Public Health England/British Society for Allergy and Clinical Immunology, WAO World Allergy Organization
| Serious allergic reactions observed after the receipt of an mRNA vaccine are rare. |
| Reporting rate of serious allergic reactions for viral vector COVID-19 vaccines seems to be similar to that for COVID-19 mRNA vaccines. |
| The underlying mechanism of COVID-19 vaccine-related allergies have not yet been fully elucidated. |
| A risk stratification assessment for the development of allergic reactions should be conducted before the receipt of a vaccine against COVID-19. |