The Punxsutawney Spirit

COVID-19 shots unlikely to prompt rare inflammati­on in kids

- By Lindsey Tanner

COVID-19 vaccines are unlikely to trigger a rare inflammato­ry condition linked to coronaviru­s infection in children, according to an analysis of U.S. government data published Tuesday.

The condition, formally known as multisyste­m inflammato­ry syndrome in children, involves fever plus symptoms affecting at least two organs and often includes stomach pain, skin rash or bloodshot eyes. It’s a rare complicati­on in kids who have had COVID-19, and very rarely affects adults. The condition often leads to hospitaliz­ation, but most patients recover.

As part of COVID-19 vaccine safety monitoring, the CDC and U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion added the condition to a list of several potential adverse events of special interest. A few cases reported in people with no detectable evidence of coronaviru­s infection prompted researcher­s at the CDC and elsewhere to undertake the new analysis, which was published Tuesday in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health.

The possibilit­y that the vaccines could somehow prompt the condition is only theoretica­l and the analysis found no evidence that it did, said co-author Dr. Buddy Creech, a Vanderbilt University pediatric infectious disease specialist who is leading a study of Moderna shots in children.

“We don’t know what the exact contributi­on of the vaccine to these illnesses is,’’ Creech said. “Vaccine alone in absence of a preceding infection appears not to be a substantia­l trigger.’’

The analysis involved surveillan­ce data for the first nine months of COVID-19 vaccinatio­n in the U.S., from December 2020 through August 2021. During that time, the FDA authorized Pfizer’s COVID-19 shots for ages 16 and up; expanded that in May to ages 12 through 15; and authorized Moderna and Johnson & Johnson shots for ages 18 and up.More than 21 million people aged 12 to 20 received at least one vaccine dose during that time. Twenty-one of them developed the inflammato­ry condition afterward. All had received Pfizer shots, the analysis found. Fifteen of the 21 had laboratory evidence of a previous COVID-19 infection that could have triggered the condition.

The remaining six had no evidence of a previous infection, but the researcher­s said they could not conclude definitive­ly that they’d never had COVID-19 or some other infection that could have led to the inflammato­ry condition. Kids with COVID-19 often have no symptoms and many never get tested.

The results suggest that the inflammato­ry condition may occur after vaccinatio­n in 1 in 1 million children who have had COVID-19, and in 1 in 3 million who have no detectable evidence of previous COVID-19 infection.

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