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Safety of live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) in children with moderate to severe asthma

Authors :
Paul J. Turner
Louise Fleming
Sejal Saglani
Jo Southern
Nick J. Andrews
Elizabeth Miller
Alexandra Adams
Christine Doyle
Michel Erlewyn-Lajeunesse
Katy Fidler
Atul Gupta
Stephen M. Hughes
Andrew Ives
Nicola Jay
Sonal Kansra
Louise Michaelis
Samantha Moss
Clare Murray
Prasad Nagakumar
Graham Roberts
Paul Seddon
Ian Sinha
Gary Stiefel
Huw M. Thomas
Medical Research Council (MRC)
Department of Health
Source :
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 1164.e6
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background:Live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) is recommended for annual influenza vaccination in children from age 2 years. However, some guidelines recommend against its use in children with asthma or recurrent wheeze due to concerns over its potential to induce wheezing. Objective: To assess the safety of LAIV in children with moderate-severe asthma, and in preschool children with recurrent wheeze. Methods: Prospective, multi-center, open label, phase IV intervention studyin 14 specialist UK clinics.LAIV was administered under medical supervision, with follow-up of asthma symptoms 72 hours and 4 weeks late, using validated questionnaires.Clinical Trials.gov registration NCT02866942, EU Clinical Trials registration 2016-002352-24. Results: 478 young people (median 9.3, range 2–18 years) with physician-diagnosed asthma or recurrent wheeze were recruited, including 208 (44%) prescribed high-dose inhaled corticosteroids and 122 (31%) with severe asthma.There was no significant change in asthma symptoms in the 4 weeks following administration (median change 0, P=.26, McNemar’s test), with no impact of level of baseline asthma control/symptoms in predicting either a worsening of asthma or exacerbation following LAIV using a regression model. 47 subjects (14.7%, 95%CI 11% to 19.1%) reported a severe asthma exacerbation in the four weeks following immunization, requiring short course of systemic corticosteroids; in four cases, this occurred within 72 hours of vaccine. No association with asthma severity, baseline lung function or asthma control was identified.Conclusions: LAIV appears to be well-tolerated in the vast majority of children with asthma or recurrent wheeze, includingthosewhose asthma is categorized as severe or poorly controlled

Details

ISSN :
10976825
Volume :
145
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....10dc216d497b88ec42430112ff3b6a70