Los Angeles Times

Report finds severe reactions to vaccine are rare

- By Karen Kaplan

Severe allergic reactions to the COVID-19 vaccine made by Pfizer and BioNTech were rare in the first 10 days of its rollout across the country, according to a new report from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In total, 21 cases of anaphylaxi­s — none of them fatal — have been confirmed among nearly 1.9 million doses administer­ed, CDC researcher­s wrote Wednesday in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. That works out to 11.1 cases per 1 million doses.

Anaphylaxi­s is a severe allergic reaction that can be triggered by a vaccine, as well as by food, medication, insect stings and latex. The reaction can be fatal if not treated immediatel­y, typically with an injection of epinephrin­e to open airways in the lungs.

The reports of anaphylaxi­s and other side effects of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine were made to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), which is maintained by the CDC and the Food and Drug Administra­tion to keep track of safety issues once a vaccine is made available to the public.

The Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine was the first to receive emergency use authorizat­ion from U.S. regulators, and the first doses went into the arms of front-line healthcare workers Dec. 14. The new CDC report is based on 1,893,360 doses administer­ed through Dec. 23.

Those doses resulted in 175 possible cases of severe allergic reactions. Investigat­ors who reviewed those cases determined that 21 of them were anaphylaxi­s, and 86 were other allergic reactions. Sixty-one cases were not allergic reactions at all, and seven are still under review.

Among the 21 people who suffered anaphylaxi­s, 17 had a history of allergies, including seven people who’d had anaphylact­ic reactions before.

Seventeen of the 21 patients were treated in emergency rooms, and four patients were admitted to a hospital. Three of those hospitaliz­ed patients required intensive care.

Twenty of the patients had recovered by the time their cases were reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System. Details about the 21st patient weren’t known, but the CDC researcher­s noted that there have been no reports of anaphylaxi­s-related deaths linked to the PfizerBioN­Tech vaccine.

The 21 patients ranged in age from 27 to 60, with a median age of 40. Nineteen of them — or 90% — were women. The report authors noted that among cases in which the sex of a vaccine recipient was known, 64% were women. They also pointed out that women were more likely to have an “immediate hypersensi­tivity” to the H1N1 influenza vaccine during the 2009 flu pandemic.

After receiving the COVID-19 vaccine, the fastest anaphylact­ic reaction came on after just two minutes, and the slowest appeared after 150 minutes. The overwhelmi­ng majority of reactions came quickly, with 15 happening within the first 15 minutes of the injection and three more occurring between 15 and 30 minutes.

Nineteen of the patients were treated with epinephrin­e.

The 21 cases were not clustered in any single geographic area, and they were tied to doses from multiple lots of the vaccine.

Among the other cases of allergic reactions, more than 4 out of 5 were considered “nonserious.” The most common reactions reported to VAERS were rash or itchy skin, an itchy or scratchy throat, and mild respirator­y symptoms. Half of these reactions occurred within 12 minutes of receiving the vaccine, and 90% of those who suffered them were women.

Overall, VAERS received 4,393 reports of adverse events of any kind during the first 10 days of the PfizerBioN­Tech vaccine rollout, according to the report. That’s a rate of 0.2%.

The CDC has already updated its guidelines for administer­ing the vaccine and a similar one developed by Moderna and the National Institutes of Health, which received emergency use authorizat­ion a week after the Pfizer-BioNTech product. That guidance includes:

8 Make sure epinephrin­e is on hand and ready to use at vaccinatio­n sites.

8 Ask potential vaccine recipients about their history of allergic reactions to identify those at high risk.

8 Keep people under observatio­n for up to 30 minutes after they receive the vaccine so that cases of anaphylaxi­s can be treated quickly.

8 Make sure that healthcare providers giving out the vaccine are trained to recognize the early signs of anaphylaxi­s.

8 Give an intramuscu­lar injection of epinephrin­e immediatel­y if anaphylaxi­s is suspected.

The first doses of the Moderna vaccine were administer­ed Dec. 21, and fewer than 225,000 doses had been given out during the 10-day period of this study. A separate report on its side effects is in the works, the CDC researcher­s said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States