ERJ Open Research (Nov 2023)

COVID-19 vaccination acceptance, safety and side-effects in European patients with severe asthma

  • Apostolos Bossios,
  • Alison M. Bacon,
  • Katrien Eger,
  • Dóra Paróczai,
  • Florence Schleich,
  • Shane Hanon,
  • Svetlana Sergejeva,
  • Eleftherios Zervas,
  • Konstantinos Katsoulis,
  • Christina Aggelopoulou,
  • Konstantinos Kostikas,
  • Eleni Gaki,
  • Nikoletta Rovina,
  • Zsuzsanna Csoma,
  • Ineta Grisle,
  • Kristina Bieksiené,
  • Jolita Palacionyte,
  • Anneke ten Brinke,
  • Simone Hashimoto,
  • Florin Mihălţan,
  • Natalia Nenasheva,
  • Biljana Zvezdin,
  • Ivan Čekerevac,
  • Sanja Hromiš,
  • Vojislav Ćupurdija,
  • Zorica Lazic,
  • Rekha Chaudhuri,
  • Steven James Smith,
  • Hitasha Rupani,
  • Hans Michael Haitchi,
  • Ramesh Kurukulaaratchy,
  • Olivia Fulton,
  • Betty Frankemölle,
  • Peter Howarth,
  • Celeste Porsbjerg,
  • Elisabeth H. Bel,
  • Ratko Djukanovic,
  • Michael E. Hyland

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00590-2023
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6

Abstract

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Background Vaccination is vital for achieving population immunity to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, but vaccination hesitancy presents a threat to achieving widespread immunity. Vaccine acceptance in chronic potentially immunosuppressed patients is largely unclear, especially in patients with asthma. The aim of this study was to investigate the vaccination experience in people with severe asthma. Methods Questionnaires about vaccination beliefs (including the Vaccination Attitudes Examination (VAX) scale, a measure of vaccination hesitancy-related beliefs), vaccination side-effects, asthma control and overall safety perceptions following coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination were sent to patients with severe asthma in 12 European countries between May and June 2021. Results 660 participants returned completed questionnaires (87.4% response rate). Of these, 88% stated that they had been, or intended to be, vaccinated, 9.5% were undecided/hesitant and 3% had refused vaccination. Patients who hesitated or refused vaccination had more negative beliefs towards vaccination. Most patients reported mild (48.2%) or no side-effects (43.8%). Patients reporting severe side-effects (5.7%) had more negative beliefs. Most patients (88.8%) reported no change in asthma symptoms after vaccination, while 2.4% reported an improvement, 5.3% a slight deterioration and 1.2% a considerable deterioration. Almost all vaccinated (98%) patients would recommend vaccination to other severe asthma patients. Conclusions Uptake of vaccination in patients with severe asthma in Europe was high, with a small minority refusing vaccination. Beliefs predicted vaccination behaviour and side-effects. Vaccination had little impact on asthma control. Our findings in people with severe asthma support the broad message that COVID-19 vaccination is safe and well tolerated.