Elsevier

Vaccine

Volume 33, Issue 36, 26 August 2015, Pages 4464-4471
Vaccine

Paresthesia and sensory disturbances associated with 2009 pandemic vaccine receipt: Clinical features and risk factors

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.07.028Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Abstract

Background

Paresthesia was the third-most-common adverse event following immunization (AEFI) with 2009 monovalent AS03-adjuvanted A(H1N1)pdm09 vaccine in Quebec, Canada and was also frequently reported in Europe. This study assessed clinical features and risk factors associated with this unexpected AEFI.

Methods

Reports to the passive surveillance system were summarized. A case–control study was conducted to assess risk factors and additional investigations were undertaken among cases with symptoms persisting ≥12 months.

Results

There were 328 reports of paresthesia affecting the vaccinated arm (58%), but also face (45%), lower limbs (40%) and back/thorax (23%) with numbness but also muscle weakness (61%), motor impairment (61%), generalized myalgia (37%), visual (14%) and/or speech effects (15%). Reporting rate was highest in women of reproductive age, peaking at 30–39 years-old (28/100,000 doses administered) and exceeding that of men of the same age (7/100,000 doses) by 4-fold. Median time to onset was 2 h. Symptoms subsided within one week in 37% but lasted ≥6 months in 26%. No consistent or objective neurological findings were identified. Risk was increased with allergy history, respiratory illness the day of vaccination, depressive symptoms and family history of pulmonary disease, but decreased with physical activity the day of vaccination, and regular weekly alcohol consumption.

Conclusion

Paresthesia following 2009 pandemic vaccine receipt lasted several weeks and included other motor-sensory disturbances in an important subset of patients. Although it does not correspond with known neurological disease, and causality remains uncertain, further investigation is warranted to understand the nature and frequency of paresthesia as a possible AEFI with influenza vaccines.

Keywords

Influenza vaccine
Safety
Adverse event
Adjuvanted vaccine
Neurological

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