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Avoid Certain Vaccine-Biologic Combos


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM A RHEUMATOLOGY MEETING SPONSORED BY NEW YORK UNIVERSITY

NEW YORK – Handy mnemonic devices can help predict vaccine response in patients taking biologics for rheumatoid arthritis, according to Dr. Daniel E. Furst.

Vaccinating patients taking biologic agents for rheumatoid arthritis is tricky. The effects of both the vaccine and biologic can be T-cell dependent or independent, or sometimes both, and when the mechanisms match, the vaccine’s response will likely be attenuated, he said at a rheumatology meeting sponsored by New York University.

Dr. Daniel E. Furst

Think ‘PITH’ – (Human) Papillomavirus, Influenza A/B, Tetanus, and Hepatitis B – to remember which vaccines have protein-based antigens and are T-cell dependent, said Dr. Furst, a rheumatology professor at the University of California in Los Angeles.

For vaccines that have carbohydrate-based antigens, which are largely T-cell independent (B-cell dependent), remember ‘PHIM’: Pneumococcus, H. influenzae B, Influenza A/B, and Meningococcus.

Biologic agents that affect T-cells include methotrexate, the TNF inhibitors, abatacept, and tocilizumab. As a general rule, biologics that affect T-cells decrease one’s response to T-cell dependent vaccines. For example, etanercept has been shown to decrease by as much as half, as well as delay the response to, the hepatitis B vaccine in both normal controls and patients with RA.

In normal volunteers abatacept blunted the response to tetanus vaccine given 2 weeks later by about 50% and given 8 weeks later by about 20%, compared to normal controls (Arthritis Res. Ther. 2007;9:R38).

Likewise, tocilizumab has been shown to reduce the response to the influenza vaccine by about 15%, according to a study presented at EULAR 2007 in Barcelona.

B-cell dependent vaccine responses are diminished by B-cell directed therapy. For example, the SIERRA study of pneumococcal vaccination in rituximab-treated patients showed that, compared to methotrexate alone, a combination of rituximab plus methotrexate decreased the response to the vaccination at 4 weeks by 30% to 60% (Arthritis Rheum. 2010;62:64-74). "That’s just what we would expect," Dr. Furst noted.

It is important to note that biologics that affect T-cell independent mechanisms (B-cell directed therapy), such as rituximab, will not usually affect T-cell mediated vaccine responses. For example, rituximab does not change the response to tetanus toxoid, said Dr. Furst. Similarly, T-cell dependent biologics will not affect T-cell independent vaccinations, citing as an example the lack of effect of adalimumab on the response to the pneumococcal vaccine, according to a paper presented at EULAR in 2006.

The influenza A/B vaccine is an exception to the rule, because it first requires an early B-cell response followed by a T-cell response.

Dr. Furst recommends avoiding live attenuated virus vaccines in patients on biologics or immunosuppressive agents. Vaccines that are likely to be affected include those for varicella/zoster, intranasal influenza/H1N1, measles/mumps/rubella (MMR), yellow fever, oral polio, typhoid (Ty21a oral), vaccinia (smallpox), the BCG vaccine for tuberculosis, and rotavirus. Live viruses can result in disseminated disease in such patients, he said. Ideally patients should be immunized with these vaccines as needed before starting a biologic or any other immunosuppressive therapy.

Dr. Furst is the recipient of research funding/consultant/advisory board member of Abbott Laboratories, Actelion Pharmaceuticals, Amgen, Biogen Idec, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Centocor Ortho Biotech, CORRONA, Gilead Sciences, GlaxoSmithKline, Novartis Pharmaceuticals, Pfizer, Roche Pharmaceuticals/Genentech, and UCB.

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