Clinical disease activity in autoimmune rheumatic patients receiving COVID-19 vaccines
Date
2024
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BMC Rheumatology
Abstract
Background Vaccines are a crucial component of the global efforts to control the spread of COVID-19. Very little
is known about COVID-19 vaccine responses in patients living with autoimmune rheumatic conditions in Africa.
We examined the clinical reaction to COVID-19 vaccinations in Ghanaians diagnosed with autoimmune rheumatic
disease.
Methods This was a hospital-based interventional cohort study of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and
rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients recruited via regular face-to-face clinic visits. The systemic lupus erythematosus
disease activity index Selena modification (SELENA-SLEDAI) and the disease activity score 28-joint count-erythrocyte
sedimentation rate (DAS28-ESR) were used to measure changes in disease activity levels.
Results Thirty-eight (38) patients of which 21 (55.3%) were diagnosed with SLE and 17 (44.7%) with RA contributed
data for analyses. Most (89.5%) of the patients were females, with a mean age of 37.4 years. The SLE patients
experienced a notable increase in severe flares during weeks three and six, as well as the third and sixth months,
followed by subsequent decreases in the twelfth month, while remission levels increased throughout the same
period. Among RA patients, high disease activity decreased during weeks three and six, as well as the third, sixth, and
twelfth months, with remission levels increasing during the same time. A low dose (≥50<75 mg) dose of azathioprine
was at some point associated with having a severe flare among SLE patients. After both vaccine doses, SLE patients
were the majority having experienced both local and systemic reactions, all resolving within 24 h. Approximately
73.7% of the patients were COVID-19 negative at baseline. During post-vaccination visits, this increased to 100% by
week six, with no positives thereafter.
Conclusion This study explores COVID-19 vaccine responses in Ghanaian autoimmune rheumatic disease patients,
revealing disease activity levels in RA patients improved after vaccination compared to SLE patients. Our findings
identify a potential link between low-dose azathioprine and severe flares in SLE patients, particularly evident in the
third-week post-vaccination. Further research is warranted to clarify these findings and guide tailored treatment
approaches in this medically significant population during pandemics and vaccination efforts.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
COVID-19, Disease activity, Vaccination