Attitudes Towards and Safety of the SARS-CoV-2 Inactivated Vaccines in 188 Patients with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: a Post-Vaccination Cross-Sectional Survey
Clinical and Experimental Medicine(2022)
The Third Xiangya Hospital of Central South University | The Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University
Abstract
Vaccination is key in mastering the COVID-19 pandemic. Data on attitudes towards and safety of the SARS-CoV-2 inactivated vaccines in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) are limited. A post-vaccination cross-sectional survey was conducted to obtain data on attitudes towards and safety of the SARS-CoV-2 inactivated vaccines in SLE patients compared to healthy controls. A post-vaccination cross-sectional survey was conducted in 188 patients with SLE and in 190 healthy controls who had received at least one dose of SARS-CoV-2 inactivated vaccine to find out post-vaccination adverse event (AE) or SLE flares. A total of 188 patients with SLE and 190 healthy controls vaccinated with the two-dose regimen SARS-CoV-2 inactivated vaccine were enrolled in the study. The two groups were matched in age, sex, medical background, income, and education level. All the SLE patients were in disease remission or with low disease activity with a median age of 35 years, a sex constituent ratio of 87.4% female, and a median disease duration of 4 years. SLE patients had much more concerns about vaccination safety (44.7% vs. 15.8%, P < 0.001), and were much less willing to get vaccinated (57.4% vs. 88.4%, P < 0.001). SLE patients had more mild adverse events after the first vaccine dose (43.6% vs. 25.3%, P = 0.008), and less mild adverse events after the second vaccine dose (19.8% vs. 34.9%, P = 0.024), compared with healthy controls. The AEs were minor and there were no serious or major adverse events in both groups. In patients with SLE, the post-vaccination disease activity remained stable. One previously undiagnosed female progressed into symptomatic SLE after one week of vaccination. Although SLE patients had concerns about the safety of the SARS-CoV-2 vaccines, the inactivated vaccination was safe in patients with stable SLE.
MoreTranslated text
Key words
Systemic lupus erythematosus,COVID-19,SARS-CoV-2,Vaccine,Adverse event
PDF
View via Publisher
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example

Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Related Papers
1999
被引用38 | 浏览
1997
被引用14555 | 浏览
2020
被引用811 | 浏览
2021
被引用71 | 浏览
2021
被引用41 | 浏览
2021
被引用61 | 浏览
2021
被引用31 | 浏览
2021
被引用45 | 浏览
Data Disclaimer
The page data are from open Internet sources, cooperative publishers and automatic analysis results through AI technology. We do not make any commitments and guarantees for the validity, accuracy, correctness, reliability, completeness and timeliness of the page data. If you have any questions, please contact us by email: report@aminer.cn
Chat Paper
去 AI 文献库 对话