From the Journals

Infliximab safe for recently vaccinated Kawasaki patients


 

FROM THE PEDIATRIC INFECTIOUS DISEASE JOURNAL

Infliximab is safe to use in infants and young children with Kawasaki disease (KD) who have recently received live viral vaccinations, reported Aaron M. Lee, MS, and his associates at Rady Children’s Hospital-San Diego.

The study included 38 children, aged either less than 18 months or 4-6 years, who received either a 5 mg/kg or a 10 mg/kg dose of infliximab within 90 days of receiving a live vaccination of MMR, varicella-zoster virus, or rotavirus. During a 90-day follow-up period, no serious infections requiring antimicrobial therapy or hospitalization were reported. A single patient who received an MMR/VZV vaccine 42 days before infliximab treatment developed urticaria 15 minutes after the infliximab transfusion began, which was resolved with hydroxyzine.

“The data presented here suggest that a single dose of infliximab can be safely administered to acute KD patients regardless of recent live virus vaccination,” the investigators concluded.

Find the full report in the Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal (2017 Apr;36(4):435-7).

Recommended Reading

Presume parents want HPV vaccines for tweens
MDedge Dermatology
Historic HIV vaccine efficacy study underway in South Africa
MDedge Dermatology
Statin use increases risk of herpes zoster
MDedge Dermatology
Model: Quadrivalent vaccine could cost effectively cut MSM’s HPV-related cancers
MDedge Dermatology
ACIP releases updated guidance for adult vaccinations
MDedge Dermatology
Sprint to find Zika vaccine could hinge on summer outbreaks
MDedge Dermatology
Zika vaccine development expected to last through 2020
MDedge Dermatology
Shingles vaccine deemed effective in people with autoimmune disease
MDedge Dermatology
Exposure to HPV vaccine in pregnancy not linked to birth defects
MDedge Dermatology
Anthony Fauci faces the ‘perpetual challenge’ of emerging infections
MDedge Dermatology