To the Editor, Allergen‐specific immunotherapy (AIT) is an important therapeutic option for allergic diseases mediated by IgE. Subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT) requires patients to regularly visit their doctors and receive injections… Click to show full abstract
To the Editor, Allergen‐specific immunotherapy (AIT) is an important therapeutic option for allergic diseases mediated by IgE. Subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT) requires patients to regularly visit their doctors and receive injections at weekly or monthly intervals for at least 3 years. However, the ongoing COVID‐19 pandemic has influenced the routine for SCIT and impacted adherence to SCIT to a large degree. Vaccination is considered as an effective strategy to prevent COVID‐19 infection and ameliorate its outcome. Thus far, two mRNA‐based vaccines, three inactivated‐virus vaccines and two adenovirus‐vector vaccines have mainly been used in countries worldwide. COVID‐19 vaccines are promoted to general people and more than 78 billion vaccine doses have been administered globally at the time of writing this paper. This situation raises new concerns about the relationship between COVID‐19 vaccination and SCIT for both allergists and patients undergoing SCIT. Although the European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology recommended that AIT should be separated from vaccination for infectious diseases by at least 1 week, this is not the case in clinical practice. In fact, the interval between AIT and COVID‐19 vaccination recommended by physicians and even some allergists is 1–4 weeks or even longer. Such long intervals will impact the regular injections for SCIT, especially during the up‐dosing phase. Thus, determination of an appropriate interval that can balance the safety of the injections and minimize the influence on SCIT is needed. Unfortunately, real‐life data on this topic are inadequate. This led us to explore the safety of simultaneous receipt of COVID‐19 vaccination and SCIT. A web‐based survey was conducted from 21 June to 23 July 2021. Patients who received regular SCIT in the Allergy Department at Peking Union Medical College Hospital (PUMCH) were invited to participate in an electronic questionnaire (Table 1) through the Wenjuanxing platform on social media. The study was approved by the Research and Ethics Board of PUMCH (S‐K1668). A total of 222 patients with SCIT completed the questionnaire. Of these, 143 (64%) received two doses of inactivated COVID‐19 vaccine (Corona Vac [Sinovac, China] or BIBBP‐CorV [Sinopharm, China]) during their SCIT schedule. Among the vaccinated patients, 57 (40%) had anxiety about negative interference between their vaccine and SCIT/allergic disease. Ninety‐seven (68%) patients consulted an allergist about whether they could be vaccinated and whether an intermission for SCIT was needed during vaccination. As a result, 66 (46%) patients stopped SCIT during vaccination, of whom 56 patients stopped SCIT for 1 week before and after vaccination as recommended by an allergist based on the guidelines. For the remaining patients, the interval between SCIT and vaccination was 2 weeks in seven patients and at least 4 weeks in three patients. Seventy‐seven (54%) patients did not change their SCIT schedule during vaccination, but only five patients were administered the two types of injections simultaneously because they did not inform doctors that they had received another injection on the same day. The findings for the patients were similar to the results of an international survey in the allergy community. In that survey, 58% of doctors would not change the AIT schedule and 77% of doctors would not stop AIT before vaccination. A total of 27 (18%) patients reported vaccination‐related adverse reactions. Local adverse reactions at the injection site, including pain, swelling, redness, or pruritus, were reported by 9 (6%) patients. Fatigue (7%) was the most common systemic reaction, followed by headache (5%), fever (3%), drowsiness (3%), rash (3%), dizziness (3%), cough (2%), nausea (2%), vomiting (1%), decreased appetite (1%), palpitation (1%), and diarrhea (1%). Most of these adverse reactions were mild, and only three patients received treatment. Compared with clinical trials of COVID‐19 vaccines, headache (1%–3% vs. 5%), drowsiness (0%– 1% vs. 3%), and dizziness (0%–1% vs. 3%) seemed to be higher in the present study, while other adverse reactions were similar to those in the clinical trials. No previously reported severe adverse reactions, such as anaphylaxis, cardiac injury, and thrombotic thrombocytopenia,6‐8 were observed in the present study. The impact of SCIT interruption on adverse reactions to COVID‐19 vaccines was further analyzed. No difference in adverse reactions to COVID‐19 vaccines between patients who stopped and did not
               
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