Guidelines

COVID-19 vaccination recommended for rheumatology patients


 

How well does it work?

One unanswered question is whether the COVID-19 vaccines work as well for patients with rheumatic diseases. The task force was reassured by data showing efficacy across a range of subgroups, including some with immunosenescence, Dr. Curtis said. “But until we have data in rheumatology patients, we’re just not going to know,” he said.

The guidelines specify that some drug regimens be modified when patients are vaccinated.

For patients taking rituximab, vaccination should be delayed, but only for those who are able to maintain safe social distancing to reduce the risk for COVID-19 exposure, Dr. Curtis said. “If somebody has just gotten rituximab recently, it might be more ideal to complete the vaccine series about 2-4 weeks before the next rituximab dose,” he said. “So if you are giving that therapy, say, at 6-month intervals, if you could vaccinate them at around month 5 from the most recent rituximab cycle, that might be more ideal.”

The guidance calls for withholding JAK inhibitors for a week after each vaccine dose is administered.

It calls for holding SQ abatacept 1 week prior and 1 week after the first COVID-19 vaccine dose, with no interruption after the second dose.

For abatacept IV, clinicians should “time vaccine administration so that the first vaccination will occur 4 weeks after abatacept infusion (i.e., the entire dosing interval), and postpone the subsequent abatacept infusion by 1 week (i.e., a 5-week gap in total).” It recommends no medication adjustment for the second vaccine dose.

For cyclophosphamide, the guidance recommends timing administration to occur about a week after each vaccine dose, when feasible.

None of this advice should supersede clinical judgment, Dr. Curtis said.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

How has the pandemic affected rural and urban cancer patients?
Federal Practitioner
Alien cells may explain COVID-19 brain fog
Federal Practitioner
CDC chief lays out attack plan for COVID variants
Federal Practitioner
Routine COVID-19 screening unnecessary for cancer outpatients
Federal Practitioner
Organ transplant patient dies after receiving COVID-19–infected lungs
Federal Practitioner
Six-month follow-up shows continuing morbidity for COVID-19 survivors
Federal Practitioner
Native Americans Embrace the COVID-19 Vaccines ‘to Protect the Community and Preserve the Culture’
Federal Practitioner
Another COVID-19 Adverse Effect: Routine Vaccinations Declined Steeply
Federal Practitioner
Variants spur new FDA guidance on COVID vaccines, tests, drugs
Federal Practitioner
Loss of smell lingers post COVID-19
Federal Practitioner