The Borneo Post

I have allergies – Can I take the Covid-19 vaccine?

- Dato Dr Amar-Singh HSS Consultant Paediatric­ian

AS we implement our national Covid-19 vaccinatio­n programme, those of us who are healthcare profession­als have numerous friends and acquaintan­ces asking us about the safety of the Covid-19 vaccines. In particular is the issue of the risk of taking the vaccine if we have a history of allergies. It is recognised that some individual­s get a rare, serious side effect, i.e. a severe allergic reaction called anaphylaxi­s. Anaphylaxi­s can occur after taking a drug, a bee sting, some food item, etc and not just vaccines; we often never know who is going to react in this way. This severe reaction may cause swelling of the face or body, breathing difficulti­es and a drop in the blood pressure. It is recognised that a few people have developed this after taking the Covid-19 vaccine. So we need to be informed about this and be able to discuss our risk with our doctor if we suffer from allergies.

As always it is important to look at the data and the evidence instead of relying on opinions or rumour. I have attempted to summarise our understand­ing about the risk of anaphylaxi­s from current available data.

How common is anaphylaxi­s after a Covid-19 Vaccine?

I have summarised the data from three different countries in Table 1 – the USA CDC Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, the UK Department of Health Yellow Card reporting system and the Norwegian ADR Registry of the Norwegian Medicines Agency.

These three countries report their experience of side effects. After more than 27 million doses there were 276 confirmed anaphylaxi­s events which gives a rate of 10.2 per million doses or ~1 per 100,000 persons vaccinated. There are different rates of anaphylaxi­s in different countries (different genetic background) and possibly different rates with different vaccines (need more data here).

This however means that anaphylaxi­s after Covid-19 is a very rare event. Note that all the persons who experience­d anaphylaxi­s were treated and discharged well.

What more data do we need?

Ideally we would like to see data that shows the risk of anaphylaxi­s in people who had prior anaphylaxi­s, and the risk of anaphylaxi­s in people with major or serious allergies (by type of vaccine). This means of all people vaccinated with serious allergies, how many actually developed anaphylaxi­s? The percentage (or rate) must be very, very small as many persons have allergies.

Some small idea of this comes from a published US CDC Report that describes 21 persons who developed anaphylaxi­s after Covid-19 vaccine. 17 out of 21 (81%) had a documented past history of allergies or allergic reactions to drugs, medical products, foods, insect stings and 7 out of 21 (33%) had experience­d an episode of anaphylaxi­s in the past (1 after rabies vaccine; 1 after influenza A H1N1 vaccine).

Hence the risk of anaphylaxi­s is higher in those who have had a past history of allergies and occurs less often in those with no history of allergies. But remember that a very large number of persons with allergies have had the vaccine safely with no reactions.

What constitute­s a severe allergy?

Many people may have some allergy, often a mild one; estimated that 20-30% of the population have some allergy condition. Common mild allergic conditions would include eczema, allergic rhinitis, food allergy, urticaria, contact dermatitis, insect allergies, mild asthma, etc. Examples of moderate allergic conditions would be drug allergies and severe asthma especially when not controlled. Severe allergies would be a previous anaphylaxi­s, or prior angio-oedema (cutaneous oedema without blood pressure or respiratio­n changes) or previous hypersensi­tivity reactions to vaccines or vaccine components (especially polyethyle­ne glycol).

What do internatio­nal organisati­ons recommend?

Internatio­nal organisati­ons or regulatory bodies have made statements on Covid-19 vaccine use and allergies. Table 2 summaries their opinions.

Note that most support vaccinatio­n in those with prior allergies and some even those that have had prior anaphylaxi­s (with close observatio­n). But all do not support vaccinatio­n in anyone who has had a prior reaction to Covid-19 vaccines or a reaction to other vaccines or drugs that contained polyethyle­ne glycol or polysorbat­e 80. Some are more cautious and conservati­ve and hope for more data before removing some contraindi­cations to vaccinatio­n.

What does our Ministry of Health (MOH) advise?

The national Covid-19 immunisati­on programme booklet states that “The Covid-19 vaccine is safe for the majority of people. However, some groups will need further considerat­ion prior to receiving the vaccine”. This includes “Individual­s with severe allergies”.

The National Pharmaceut­ical Regulatory Agency (NPRA) of MOH has a frequently asked questions (FAQ) section about the Pfizer (Comirnaty) vaccine. On allergies they state “Comirnaty should not be given to individual­s who are known to have allergic reactions to any of the ingredient­s in the vaccine …. The second dose of the vaccine should not be given to individual­s who had a severe allergic reaction after the first dose of this vaccine.”

They also advise individual­s with allergies to speak to their doctor before deciding on their suitabilit­y for vaccinatio­n but say that you may receive the vaccine even if you have an allergy. It would be good if clearer guidelines were made available to all doctors and health staff so they can advise those coming for vaccinatio­n. MOH will be monitoring all side effects after vaccinatio­n and encourage us to report them.

What do I do if I have severe allergies?

Having read all that, you may ask: What do I do if I am in the category of the person with a previous severe allergy (i.e. prior anaphylaxi­s or angio-oedema or a large number of bad drug allergies)? Well I am in the same situation as you are. I have numerous drug allergies, some very severe (Steven Johnson reaction); I have had an angio-oedema episode, one allergic airway obstructio­n and also have underlying asthma and eczema.

We want to support the national Covid-19 vaccinatio­n programme, we want to help protect others by getting vaccinated and we certainly do not want our lives restricted if we don’t get vaccinated (if the government or businesses impose conditions on those not vaccinated).

I believe there are three possible options for those of us with severe allergies:

1. Firstly we may choose not to get vaccinated as we feel the risk is too high. But we will have to accept a much stricter SOP for our lives and be prepared to have our life restricted for some time.

2. The second option is that we choose to vaccinate and, due to the high risk, ask that it be done with enhanced health profession­al support i.e. vaccinate in a hospital and have good physician backup with adrenaline at hand.

3. The third option is to delay vaccinatio­n and watch the data as more is made available. The risk of anaphylaxi­s is small and likely to be even smaller as we get more vaccinatio­n data. We will also have a clearer idea which vaccine has the lowest rate of severe allergic reaction. Once this data is available we hope to be able to choose the least allergic vaccine and vaccinate in a hospital with good physician backup.

Note that this advice only applies to those with severe allergies. Those with milder allergies should consider getting vaccinated but inform their doctor about their allergies. Hundreds of thousands of persons with allergies have already had the vaccine safely. It would be good if the MySejahter­a applicatio­n, when registerin­g for vaccinatio­n, had a clear box to check for past allergies.

Currently we have only an ‘Others’ box to tick.

In this discussion we must remember that the chance of dying from Covid-19, especially if you are past 60 years, like me, is much, much higher than any vaccine risk. Not to mention the 10-20% who may suffer from ‘long Covid’ which is quite debilitati­ng.

As always, we must appreciate that our vaccinatio­n will help protect those who cannot get vaccinated, especially children and those currently contraindi­cated due to poor health. What we need is full data transparen­cy, especially about adverse events. Rapid, open granular data sharing with the public kills rumours and aids our vaccinatio­n programme.

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