Session Information
Session Type: ACR Poster Session A
Session Time: 9:00AM-11:00AM
Background/Purpose: Pneumococcal vaccination is recommended for patients requiring treatment with immunosuppressive drugs. The aim of this report is to describe unusually severe adverse reactions to pneumococcal vaccination in each of seven consecutive patients with cryopyrin associated periodic syndromes (CAPS).
Methods: Seven consecutive patients with CAPS were vaccinated with pneumococcal polysaccharide or conjugate vaccines according to current guidelines. Clinical information was collected retrospectively.
Results: Within a few hours after the vaccination, all seven patients developed severe local reactions at the injection site (Table). Two patients had to be hospitalized for systemic reactions including fever. One patient had developed a severe headache associated with neck stiffness and photophobia. A florid red rash was covering much of the arm where the vaccine had been administered. The patient was admitted to her local hospital that evening with a diagnosis of presumed viral meningitis. Lumbar puncture revealed elevated white cells (96 per cubic millimetre, neutrophils 84%), normal glucose 2.3 mmol/L and elevated protein at 0.79 g/L In all patients, the symptoms resolved in a period of 3 to 17 days. The reaction occurred with pneumococcal vaccines from three different manufacturers and in patients with different CAPS phenotypes. Four vaccination reactions occurred in temporal association with concomitant co-injections of canakinumab, two other vaccination reactions were separated by 15 days from last canakinumab dose. In one case, an event was also observed prior to any canakinumab therapy. Some patients had been vaccinated with a variety of other vaccines without complications.
Table.Clinical characteristics of CAPS patients who developed severe inflammation after pneumococcal vaccination
Case Nr. Age, gender |
Clinical presen-tation |
NLRP3 Mutation |
CAPS duration |
CAPS treatment |
Vaccine/ manufacturer |
Days since last canakinumab |
Days until onset |
Local symptoms |
Systemic reaction
|
Days until resolution |
Previous uneventful vaccines |
Case 1 43 years, female |
MWS |
T348M |
43 years |
Canakinumab 150 mg every 8 weeks |
Pneumovax II / Sanofi Pasteur |
New canakinumab dose given on day of vaccination (63 days since previous dose) |
0 |
Swelling, rubor, dolor, calor |
Fever, nausea, headache, stiff neck |
17 |
Nil |
Case 2 20 years, female |
NOMID |
L632F |
20 years |
Canakinumab 300 mg every 8 weeks |
Pneumovax II/ Sanofi Pasteur |
New canakinumab dose given on day of vaccination (56 days since previous dose) |
0 |
Swelling, rubor, dolor, calor |
Fever |
12 |
Influenza |
Case 3 26 years, female |
NOMID |
A352T |
26 years |
Canakinumab 300 mg every 8 weeks |
Pneumovax II/ Sanofi Pasteur |
New canakinumab dose given on day of vaccination (49 days since previous dose) |
0 |
Swelling, rubor, dolor, calor |
Not known |
14 |
Nil |
Case 4 43 years, male |
MWS |
T348M |
43 years |
Canakinumab 150 mg every 8 weeks |
Pneumovax II/ Sanofi Pasteur |
New canakinumab dose given on day of vaccination (63 days since previous dose) |
0 |
dolor |
None |
4 |
Influenza |
Case 5 24 years, female |
MWS |
E311K |
10 years |
Canakinumab 150 mg every 8 weeks |
Pneumovax 23/ Merck |
Canakinumab was given 15 days prior to vaccination |
0 |
Swelling, rubor, dolor, calor |
None |
3 |
Influenza, HiB |
Case 6 52 years, female |
MWS |
E 311K |
51 years |
Canakinumab 300 mg every 8 weeks |
Pneumovax 23/ Merck |
Canakinumab was given 15 days prior to vaccination |
0 |
Swelling, rubor, dolor, calor |
None |
10 |
Influenza |
Case 7 7 years, female |
FCAS |
No known mutation |
7 years |
None |
Prevenar 13/ Wyeth |
No prior or concomitant canakinumab |
0 |
Swelling, rubor, dolor, calor |
None |
4 |
Diphtheria Polio Tetanus |
Conclusion: Pneumococcal vaccines can trigger a severe local and systemic inflammatory reaction in patients with CAPS and possibly patients with other autoinflammatory diseases. TLR triggering by pneumococcal vaccine components with subsequent inflammasome hyperactivation in CAPS patients with NLRP-3 mutations may explain the high incidence rate of this event, its rapid onset, severity, and systemic nature.
Careful consideration is warranted when implicating current EULAR immunization guidelines in this patient population.
To cite this abstract in AMA style:
Walker UA, Hawkins PN, Williams R, Hoffman HM, Kuemmerle-Deschner JB. Severe Inflammation Following Vaccination Against Streptococcus Pneumoniae in Patients with Cryopyrin-Associated Periodic Syndromes [abstract]. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2015; 67 (suppl 10). https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/severe-inflammation-following-vaccination-against-streptococcus-pneumoniae-in-patients-with-cryopyrin-associated-periodic-syndromes/. Accessed .« Back to 2015 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting
ACR Meeting Abstracts - https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/severe-inflammation-following-vaccination-against-streptococcus-pneumoniae-in-patients-with-cryopyrin-associated-periodic-syndromes/