학술논문

The safety of co-administration of Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) and influenza vaccines.
Document Type
Article
Source
PLoS ONE. 6/3/2022, Vol. 17 Issue 6, p1-13. 13p.
Subject
*INFLUENZA vaccines
*INFLUENZA
*VACCINE safety
*BCG vaccines
*RANDOMIZED controlled trials
*WATCHFUL waiting
Language
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
Background: With the emergence of novel vaccines and new applications for older vaccines, co-administration is increasingly likely. The immunomodulatory effects of BCG could theoretically alter the reactogenicity of co-administered vaccines. Using active surveillance in a randomised controlled trial, we aimed to determine whether co-administration of BCG vaccination changes the safety profile of influenza vaccination. Methods: Participants who received influenza vaccine alone (Influenza group) were compared with those who also received BCG-Denmark vaccine in the contralateral arm (Influenza+BCG group). Data on the influenza vaccination site were collected using serial questionnaires and active follow-up for 3 months post vaccination. Results: Of 1351 participants in the Influenza+BCG group and 1418 participants in the Influenza group, 2615 (94%) provided influenza vaccine safety data. There was no significant difference in the proportion of participants with any local adverse reaction between the Influenza+BCG group and the Influenza group (918/1293 [71.0%] versus (906/1322 [68.5%], p = 0.17). The proportion of participants reporting any pain, erythema and tenderness at the influenza vaccination site were similar in both groups. Swelling was less frequent (81/1293 [6.3%] versus 119/1322 (9.0%), p = 0.01) and the maximal diameter of erythema was smaller (mean 1.8 cm [SD 2.0] versus 3.0 cm [SD 2.5], p<0.001) in the Influenza+BCG group. Sixteen participants reported serious adverse events: 9 participants in the Influenza+BCG group and 7 in the Influenza group. Conclusions: Adverse events following influenza vaccination are not increased when BCG is co-administered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]