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Immediate Hypersensitivity Reaction Related to Rabies Post-Exposure-Prophylaxis in Thailand with Subsequent Rabies Vaccine Change to Avoid Polygeline Vaccine Excipient with Successful Challenge and Treatment Tolerance in the United States

BACKGROUND: Untreated rabies is fatal, globally killing 60,000 persons/years. Rabies vaccine (RV) is life-saving, of various types and used in high-risk rabies exposure (HRRE) as a post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) series of initial (RV-i) and completion (RV-c) doses. Polygeline has been implicated in...

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Autores principales: Beckham, J Michael, Noroski, Lenora, McNeil, J Chase
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5631732/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofx163.164
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author Beckham, J Michael
Noroski, Lenora
McNeil, J Chase
author_facet Beckham, J Michael
Noroski, Lenora
McNeil, J Chase
author_sort Beckham, J Michael
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Untreated rabies is fatal, globally killing 60,000 persons/years. Rabies vaccine (RV) is life-saving, of various types and used in high-risk rabies exposure (HRRE) as a post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) series of initial (RV-i) and completion (RV-c) doses. Polygeline has been implicated in immediate allergic reactions to tick-borne encephalitis vaccine and is an excipient in Rabipur, a purified chick embryo vaccine (PCECV) as part of Thai Red Cross (TRC) RV protocol. In United States, RVs are Rabavert (PCECV), containing polygeline, and Imovax Rabies, a human diploid cell vaccine (HDCV) that does not. RV-associated adverse reactions occur up to 6% as mostly non-IgE/skin-limited or immune complex and rarely nonfatal anaphylaxis. We describe TRC-RV-immediate allergic reaction in a male child traveling in Thailand and how after his return to United States , we were able to overcome RV-PEP delays and demonstrate safe treatment tolerance with a different RV. METHODS: Review of literature, Thai/US RV and Allergy Protocols, Pink Book/RV Inserts RESULTS: A healthy 4-years old US boy had HRRE from feral cat bite in Thailand with immediate disseminated hives at 1 hour post-TRC-RVi (Day 0), resolved with oral antihistamine. Upon US return (Days 3-8), clinicians stopped RV-PEP due to RV allergy fears; Day 6 rabies-immunoglobulin given. On Day 9, US academic Allergist/Infectious Disease referral done: no other medical problems found; HDCV skin prick test (negative); TRC-RV (not available); two-step HDCV-RV challenge performed (10%, then full); Days 13 and 20, HDCV-RV-c full tolerated; Days 30+, asymptomatic; serum tryptase 3.2 ng/ml; Rapid Fluorescent Foci Inhibition Test (RFFIT) CONCLUSION: RV type I hypersensitivity reactions are uncommon, components to RVs vary worldwide and such adverse RV reactions should not stop RV-PEP. Analysis of vaccine content, exposures, and relevant testing is critical to deducing likely reaction type and candidate antigens as excipients in non-RVs and across RV types. IgE-vaccine tests may not be reliable/possible and mid-series RV change to non-polygeline type may be a viable option when RV-c must be done to reach timely RV-c-PEP treatment tolerance and avoid hypersensitivity reactions. DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures.
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spelling pubmed-56317322017-11-07 Immediate Hypersensitivity Reaction Related to Rabies Post-Exposure-Prophylaxis in Thailand with Subsequent Rabies Vaccine Change to Avoid Polygeline Vaccine Excipient with Successful Challenge and Treatment Tolerance in the United States Beckham, J Michael Noroski, Lenora McNeil, J Chase Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: Untreated rabies is fatal, globally killing 60,000 persons/years. Rabies vaccine (RV) is life-saving, of various types and used in high-risk rabies exposure (HRRE) as a post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) series of initial (RV-i) and completion (RV-c) doses. Polygeline has been implicated in immediate allergic reactions to tick-borne encephalitis vaccine and is an excipient in Rabipur, a purified chick embryo vaccine (PCECV) as part of Thai Red Cross (TRC) RV protocol. In United States, RVs are Rabavert (PCECV), containing polygeline, and Imovax Rabies, a human diploid cell vaccine (HDCV) that does not. RV-associated adverse reactions occur up to 6% as mostly non-IgE/skin-limited or immune complex and rarely nonfatal anaphylaxis. We describe TRC-RV-immediate allergic reaction in a male child traveling in Thailand and how after his return to United States , we were able to overcome RV-PEP delays and demonstrate safe treatment tolerance with a different RV. METHODS: Review of literature, Thai/US RV and Allergy Protocols, Pink Book/RV Inserts RESULTS: A healthy 4-years old US boy had HRRE from feral cat bite in Thailand with immediate disseminated hives at 1 hour post-TRC-RVi (Day 0), resolved with oral antihistamine. Upon US return (Days 3-8), clinicians stopped RV-PEP due to RV allergy fears; Day 6 rabies-immunoglobulin given. On Day 9, US academic Allergist/Infectious Disease referral done: no other medical problems found; HDCV skin prick test (negative); TRC-RV (not available); two-step HDCV-RV challenge performed (10%, then full); Days 13 and 20, HDCV-RV-c full tolerated; Days 30+, asymptomatic; serum tryptase 3.2 ng/ml; Rapid Fluorescent Foci Inhibition Test (RFFIT) CONCLUSION: RV type I hypersensitivity reactions are uncommon, components to RVs vary worldwide and such adverse RV reactions should not stop RV-PEP. Analysis of vaccine content, exposures, and relevant testing is critical to deducing likely reaction type and candidate antigens as excipients in non-RVs and across RV types. IgE-vaccine tests may not be reliable/possible and mid-series RV change to non-polygeline type may be a viable option when RV-c must be done to reach timely RV-c-PEP treatment tolerance and avoid hypersensitivity reactions. DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures. Oxford University Press 2017-10-04 /pmc/articles/PMC5631732/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofx163.164 Text en © The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Beckham, J Michael
Noroski, Lenora
McNeil, J Chase
Immediate Hypersensitivity Reaction Related to Rabies Post-Exposure-Prophylaxis in Thailand with Subsequent Rabies Vaccine Change to Avoid Polygeline Vaccine Excipient with Successful Challenge and Treatment Tolerance in the United States
title Immediate Hypersensitivity Reaction Related to Rabies Post-Exposure-Prophylaxis in Thailand with Subsequent Rabies Vaccine Change to Avoid Polygeline Vaccine Excipient with Successful Challenge and Treatment Tolerance in the United States
title_full Immediate Hypersensitivity Reaction Related to Rabies Post-Exposure-Prophylaxis in Thailand with Subsequent Rabies Vaccine Change to Avoid Polygeline Vaccine Excipient with Successful Challenge and Treatment Tolerance in the United States
title_fullStr Immediate Hypersensitivity Reaction Related to Rabies Post-Exposure-Prophylaxis in Thailand with Subsequent Rabies Vaccine Change to Avoid Polygeline Vaccine Excipient with Successful Challenge and Treatment Tolerance in the United States
title_full_unstemmed Immediate Hypersensitivity Reaction Related to Rabies Post-Exposure-Prophylaxis in Thailand with Subsequent Rabies Vaccine Change to Avoid Polygeline Vaccine Excipient with Successful Challenge and Treatment Tolerance in the United States
title_short Immediate Hypersensitivity Reaction Related to Rabies Post-Exposure-Prophylaxis in Thailand with Subsequent Rabies Vaccine Change to Avoid Polygeline Vaccine Excipient with Successful Challenge and Treatment Tolerance in the United States
title_sort immediate hypersensitivity reaction related to rabies post-exposure-prophylaxis in thailand with subsequent rabies vaccine change to avoid polygeline vaccine excipient with successful challenge and treatment tolerance in the united states
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5631732/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofx163.164
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