Vaccines (May 2022)

COVID-19 Vaccination Is Safe among Mast Cell Disorder Patients, under Adequate Premedication

  • Tiago Azenha Rama,
  • Joana Miranda,
  • Diana Silva,
  • Luís Amaral,
  • Eunice Castro,
  • Alice Coimbra,
  • André Moreira,
  • José Luís Plácido

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10050718
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5
p. 718

Abstract

Read online

Reported cases of anaphylaxis following COVID-19 vaccination raised concerns about the safety of these vaccines, namely in patients suffering from clonal mast cell (MC) disorders—a heterogenous group of disorders in which patients may be prone to anaphylaxis caused by vaccination. This study aimed to assess the safety of COVID-19 vaccines in patients with clonal MC disorders. We performed an ambidirectional cohort study with 30 clonal MC disorder patients (n = 26 in the prospective arm and n = 4 in the retrospective arm), that were submitted to COVID-19 vaccination. Among these, 11 (37%) were males, and median age at vaccination date was 41 years (range: 5y to 76y). One patient had prior history of anaphylaxis following vaccination. Those in the prospective arm received a premedication protocol including H1- and H2-antihistamines and montelukast, while those in the retrospective arm did not premedicate. Overall, patients received a total of 81 doses, 73 under premedication and 8 without premedication. No MC activation symptoms were reported. COVID-19 vaccination seems to be safe in patients with clonal mast cell disorders, including those with prior anaphylaxis following vaccination. Robust premedication protocols may allow for vaccination in ambulatory settings.

Keywords