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2021 COVID-19 Testing Vaccine

Which Vaccine Causes the Greatest Antibody Response?

It’s not even close.  In terms of generating the highest S-antibody response, Moderna is the clear winner.  Pfizer comes in second, and Janssen (Johnson & Johnson) finishes in last place.  Here’s the data that backs this up.

The same volunteers we tested to figure out antibodies after vaccination and disease were separated by vaccine type and evidence of infection.  Evidence of infection includes either a positive SARS-CoV-2 test during the pandemic or the unexpected presence of N-antibodies.  We did not count two individuals who had only one dose of mRNA vaccine, nor did we include people who had both vaccine and infection.  Then we measured the antibody levels of the individuals in each group.  Here’s what we found:

VaccineLowHighAverage
Moderna8.49.18.7
Pfizer4.27.66.2
Janssen1.43.92.6

Clearly, Moderna vaccine stimulates the highest antibody response.  Then we graphed the antibody response caused by vaccine compared to the immune response of infection.

Chart, box and whisker chart

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Previous infection is better than the Janssen vaccine and nearly as good as the Pfizer vaccine.  If we eliminate those overachieving Moderna people, we get a chart that looks like this:

Immunity SourceLowHighAverage
Pfizer or Janssen1.47.66.2
COVID1.28.44.3

Graphically, the data looks like this:

Chart, box and whisker chart

Description automatically generated

It’s nearly identical. 

Let me summarize the findings and restate the question that’s been puzzling me for weeks.  Two of the three vaccines authorized in the U.S. stimulate S-antibody levels that are no better than SARS-CoV-2 infection.  Yet the CDC still insists that infected individuals be vaccinated with any of the three authorized vaccines, even if the person starts out with S-antibody levels at least as high as the expected levels resulting from vaccination.  Why?

Let me be clear.  I’m not asking whether a person who has not had COVID should be vaccinated.  That’s a legitimate question that deserves more than knee-jerk consideration, but it’s not the question I’m asking here.  I’m asking why vaccination is in the best interest of a person who has already been infected?  Maybe the answer is obvious to you; if so, please help me understand.  It doesn’t make sense to me.

Last time, I asked you to consider that the answer may be in the prioritization of population health over individual health.  This time I ask you to consider something else.  When things don’t make sense to me, I have a snarky, cynical side that asks, “Who’s profiting?”  

Something to think about.

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2021 COVID-19 Science Testing Vaccine

Vaccinate the Previously Infected? A Risk without Benefit

Vaccination of the previously infected is a risk without benefit because there’s no significant difference between S-antibody levels stimulated by SARS-CoV-2 infection when compared with vaccine.  

Using the same group of volunteers from our study to determine antibody types stimulated by vaccine and/or COVID, we measured the level of S-antibodies in the people who had them.  To make the comparison fair we did not consider the people who were both vaccinated and infected; instead, we only counted people who were vaccinated but had no evidence of disease, and we compared them to unvaccinated people with evidence of infection.  Here’s what we found:

IndividualsLowHighAverage
Vaccine171.49.16.6
COVID81.28.34.2

There were 17 people vaccinated without disease.  Their S-antibody levels ranged from 1.4 to 9.1 with an average of 6.6.  There were 8 unvaccinated individuals with evidence of infection.  That evidence could with be a positive SARS-CoV-2 test sometime during the pandemic, a positive N-antibody test, or both.  Their S-antibody levels ranged from 1.2 to 8.3 with an average of 4.2.  Any level above 1 is considered positive.

Graphically, the data looks like this:

Give a slight edge to vaccine, but really the difference between the two groups is negligible.  The COVID group includes a couple who previously had asymptomatic infections, implying that even asymptomatic infections cause the formation of S-antibodies just like vaccines.

Which causes us to return to the question we asked in early May.  Why vaccinate COVID survivors?  I still see no evidence for doing so, but there are reasons for not vaccinating previously infected people.  Our study includes two previously infected people who took the first dose of an mRNA vaccine and experienced vaccine complications so severe that they couldn’t take the second dose.  One of the two developed a debilitating condition that has not yet resolved and may persist for life.  Through June 7, 2021, VAERS received 5,208 reports of death associated with vaccine administration in the U.S.  Clearly the vaccine did not cause every reported death, but just as clearly, the vaccine death rate is greater than zero.  Death is the most serious of complications.  There are more common but less serious complications that range from inconvenience to discomfort to debilitation.  If there is no benefit, why take a risk?  That’s why my advice is that previously infected people should not be vaccinated without a compelling personal indication. 

Some researchers are beginning to agree with me.  As early as February, a study subsequently published in Nature suggested that a second dose of mRNA vaccine is unnecessary for people previously infected by SARS-CoV-2.  More recently, a pre-publication report of a study conducted at the Cleveland Clinic concludes that vaccinating individuals who have had SARS-CoV-2 infections has no benefit.

So why does the CDC still adamantly insist that COVID-19 survivors be vaccinated?  The answer lies in perspective.  The vaccination rate in a community is the single greatest factor in controlling the spread of disease and achieving the goal of herd immunity, which has already been reached in many parts of the country.  If you prioritize the good of the population over the good of any individual, then you advocate for universal vaccination even when the vaccine has no benefit, or worse yet, may cause harm to individuals.

That is not my focus as a physician.  My focus is the individual, the patient in front of me.  Health care is not a commodity that can be mass-produced without hurting individuals.  I have urged that vaccine decisions be made individually, not collectively, and I continue to do so.  I believe that the people with greatest risk of unnecessary harm from vaccine are the previously infected and the young.

The suggestion that even asymptomatic infections cause the formation of S-antibodies has implications in the ongoing debate regarding the vaccination of children, the group most likely to have asymptomatic infection.  During this debate, we must first resolve whether our priority is the population as a whole or the individual boys and girls subject to vaccination.  We may reach different conclusions depending on the priority we choose.

Here’s an idea.  Why not check S-antibody levels before vaccination?  Something to think about.

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2021 COVID-19 Science Testing Vaccine

Antibodies after Vaccination and Disease

Last time, we built a mental model of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and used that model to make predictions of antibody test results.  This time we will see how that model squares against real-world observations.

Here’s the table we created last time:

InfectedUninfected
VaccinatedS+ N+S+ N-
UnvaccinatedS+ N+S- N-

With their permission, I tested more than 40 individuals who fit into one of the four categories.  Here’s what I found:

InfectedUninfected
Vaccinated4 S+ N+
7 S+ N-
17 S+ N-
3 S+ N+
Unvaccinated4 S+ N+
2 S+ N-
4 S- N-
2 S+ N+

Previously Infected and Vaccinated.  There were eleven people in this category, but only 4 had both the S- and N-antibodies that our model predicted.  Surprisingly, nearly two thirds of the people in this group lacked N-antibodies.  This is not what our model predicted.  It seems some people may not form N-antibodies.  Let’s keep looking.    

Previously Infected but Unvaccinated.  There were six people in this category.  Four had both S-antibodies and N-antibodies, but two had only S-antibodies.  Again, we’re missing some of the N-antibodies predicted by our model.  What’s going on here?  I’ll offer some speculations later.  

Vaccinated without Known Infection.  There were twenty people in this category, and all but three of these individuals had the expected S+ N- antibody pattern.  All outliers were S+ N+, suggesting they had asymptomatic infections sometime during the pandemic.  Is this suggestion reasonable?  I think so.   During the pandemic we tested healthy patients before elective surgeries and found a significant number of asymptomatic infections, so we know this can happen.

Unvaccinated without Known Infection.  There were initially five people in this category, and they had neither S nor N antibodies detected in their blood.  Except for one person.  She was surprised to learn she of a silent previous infection based on the finding of both S and N antibodies in her blood.  Subsequent testing of her husband, who also is unvaccinated without previously known infection, found S and N antibodies in his blood too, bringing the total number of people in this group to six with two outliers.  

We can summarize what we’ve learned as follows:

  • Both SARS-CoV-2 infection and vaccine stimulate the production of S-antibodies, 100% of the time in this study.
  • A significant number of people, about 20% in this group, had silent SARS-CoV-2 infections during the pandemic.
  • SARS-CoV-2 infection does not seem to stimulate the production of N-antibodies consistently.  This is a pesky observation that does not fit our model.

Could it be that N-antibody production relates to the severity of disease?  Probably not since quite a few of the S+ N+ individuals in this study had asymptomatic infections.  Could it be that variant viruses cause N-antibody negative infections?  Or is the N-antibody test not very good?  All are possible, but, as we’ve said so many times since the outbreak of the pandemic, we really don’t know for sure.   What we can say is that tests for “COVID antibodies” are more complicated than they seem at first glance.  Laboratories should clearly label the antibodies measured when reporting SARS-CoV-2 antibody results.

How do the antibody levels caused by disease compare with the antibody levels caused by vaccine?  And which vaccine provides the best immune response?  We will examine these questions next time.  

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2021 COVID-19 Science Testing Vaccine

A Useful Model

Scientists create mental models to help understand the world around us.  Not that these models are reality; the real world is much, much more complicated.  Instead, these models are useful ways to think about reality.  Today I would like to create a mental model of the SARS-CoV-2 virus that will be useful as we learn more about the virus in coming weeks and months.

Think of the virus as an egg with spikes driven into the shell.  Now focus on two parts of this model: the spikes and the yolk inside the egg.  The spikes correspond to the S-proteins on the outside of the virus.  That’s easy to remember—S for spike.  The yolk corresponds to the nucleocapsid that covers the genetic material on the inside of the virus.  Let’s call the nucleocapsid “N” for short, which will also help us remember that N-proteins are inside the virus.  Now in our mind’s eye we see a virus shell with S-proteins on the outside and N-proteins on the inside.

When foreign proteins show up in your body, your immune system responds by making antibodies.  Therefore, when infected by SARS-CoV-2, your body will make at least two different types of antibodies: S-antibodies and N-antibodies. Blood tests are now available that can detect both kinds of antibodies, and both should be detected in someone who has been infected by SARS-CoV-2 in the past.

Vaccines expose the body to S-proteins only.  N-proteins are not part of vaccines.  Therefore, someone who has received a vaccine but has never been infected will have S-antibodies but not N-antibodies.  S-antibodies may come from vaccine or infection.  N-antibodies come from infection only.

Now we can use our model to predict antibody test results from four different groups of people, represented in the table below:

Previously InfectedNever Infected
VaccinatedS+ N+S+ N-
UnvaccinatedS+ N+S- N-

A simple model, but does it work?  To find out, I collected the results of antibody tests from four groups of people: people infected but not vaccinated, people vaccinated but not infected, people vaccinated and infected, and people never infected nor vaccinated.  Next time, we will review the results.

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2021 COVID-19 Science Vaccine

New Clotting Disorder Caused by Vaccine

We’ve already discussed the rare clotting disorder associated with COVID-19 vaccinations, resulting in the pause of the Janssen vaccine last month.  It’s time to take a deeper dive to understand more about this disorder. To start, we must learn a little about platelets. It’ll be quick, I promise.

Platelets are bits of cells that circulate in the blood stream looking for leaks.  When a leak is found, platelets are activated and clump together to plug the hole.  There are lots of platelets in blood, so one hole usually isn’t enough to reduce the platelet count.  However, if all the platelets are activated at once, many clumps form, and the count of platelets goes down dramatically.  The reduction of platelet count is called thrombocytopenia. “Thrombocytes” means “platelets” and “penia” means “not enough”, so “thrombocytopenia” simply means “not enough platelets”.

Heparin induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is a condition in which platelets are activated after the use of heparin, causing a suddenly drop in platelet count.  This is particularly dangerous because, as you may recognize, heparin is a “blood thinner” given to dissolve clots.  The formation of many clots is the opposite of what is desired.  HIT occurs because of an immune response in which antibodies to a molecule that forms when heparin is injected cause activation of platelets throughout the body.  The molecule is called “heparin-platelet factor 4 complexes,” but the name doesn’t matter. Most people don’t have those antibodies to this molecule.  This is a rare but life-threatening complication of heparin therapy.

The rare clotting disorders that have been rarely been observed after the Janssen vaccine have a similar mechanism.  Now referred to as vaccine induced thrombotic thrombocytopenia (VITT), it is like HIT because antibodies develop after vaccine administration that cause platelet activation.  The antibodies are similar enough to HIT antibodies that giving heparin will make the clots worse.  This is why heparin cannot be used to break down those clots.  

This seems to be the same clotting complication that has been observed with the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine, not available in the U.S., but widely available elsewhere.  Both vaccines have in common the use of an adenovirus vector to deliver the vaccine.  A viral vector is not used in the mRNA vaccines. Is VITT related to the adenovirus vector in some vaccines? Nobody knows for sure. Yet.

This is another example of unintended consequences resulting from the use of systems still in the early stages of development.  Life is full of risks; we accept that.  But wisdom demands that risks be acknowledged, quantified, and mitigated as much as possible.  Only the foolish follow science blindly.

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2021 COVID-19 Science Vaccine

Why Vaccinate COVID-19 Survivors?

In these posts I use my experience as a practicing pathologist to present clear, simple, and understandable explanations of important issues relating to the pandemic amid the noise and misleading half-truths we encounter daily.  When I don’t know, I tell you.  Today, I’m asking you to help me understand something that’s been puzzling me for weeks. Why does the CDC adamantly insist that COVID-19 survivors be vaccinated?

The CDC’s statement is simple enough.  They say that there is a wide range of outcomes to SARS-CoV-2 infection, from no effect to death, and that there is a corresponding range of immune responses to infection.  Those who had mild disease, the argument goes, may not have built up the immunity necessary to fight future infections.  The vaccine, on the other hand, is a measured dose designed to stimulate an adequate immune response.  Furthermore, they assert that there is no data on how long natural immunity may last, saying, “experts do not yet know how long you are protected from getting sick again after recovering from COVID-19.”  So, they conclude, everyone must be vaccinated, even those who have recovered from COVID-19.

Simple enough, yes.  You will find this theory repeated on health websites and in the popular press, often citing compelling studies and medical experts.

But does it make sense?  Before the pandemic, did medical science ever assert that vaccine-induced immunity is superior to natural immunity?  I’ve looked.  I cannot find that assertion from any reputable source, nor can I find that assertion supported by any body of evidence.  I’m not saying that I’ve looked everywhere.  I’m saying I looked and came up empty.  If you know where it is, please tell me. 

Let me be clear about my question.  I’m not doubting that vaccine is an important tool in the war against infections generally and SARS-CoV-2 specifically.  Clearly, vaccines provide protection to individuals most vulnerable to bad disease outcomes.  Clearly, vaccines raise the overall immunity within the population, stemming the spread of infection.  An article published in Texas Medicine on the eve of the pandemic advocates for vaccine, especially childhood vaccines—mumps, measles, rubella, and the like—using a simple risk-benefit analysis.  This analysis, and many more like it within the body of traditional medical science, compare the risk of vaccine to the risk of disease.  Acknowledging that vaccines have risk and diseases have risk, vaccines generally have less risk than disease.  This is very different from introducing the risk of vaccine to individuals who have already survived the risks of infection by the virus.

There is a glaring flaw in the CDC’s argument.  True enough, experts do not yet know how long you are protected from getting sick again after recovering from COVID-19.  But neither do experts know how long you are protected from getting sick after completing a vaccine series.  How could they know either?  Neither COVID-19 nor the vaccines have existed long enough to be studied meaningfully, which brings me back to my question.  How can we say vaccine-induced immunity is superior to natural immunity?

I cannot think of any other example of this line of thinking.  We do not insist that children who have had chicken pox get the chicken pox vaccine.  We do not give hepatitis B vaccine to individuals who have had hepatitis B infection.  In fact, before giving a hepatitis B vaccine, we usually test for antibodies to make sure the individual has not been previously infected.  Why expose someone to an additional risk unnecessarily?

Are COVID-19 vaccines different from any other vaccine?  Has a new theory of immunology suddenly replaced years of observation and wisdom?  Why would the CDC, a place I know to be filled with smart, dedicated, and sincere physicians and scientists, be so insistent that COVID-19 survivors be vaccinated?  

If you know the answers, please tell me.  I would love to hear from you.

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2021 COVID-19 Testing Vaccine

Herd Immunity

What is herd immunity and when will we get there?

Imagine a billiard table with balls racked at one end.  Smash a cue ball into the neat arrangement and all the balls will move.  That’s like the pandemic.  The energy spread from ball to ball is like the spread of virus from person to person.   

Now imagine the same table, except this time some of the balls are bolted onto the table so they can’t move.  Smash a cue ball into the rack and not as many will move.  The bolted balls are like people with immunity; they absorb energy and do not allow it to spread.  How many balls must be bolted onto the table to prevent spread of motion across the table?  That’s herd immunity; the percentage of people with COVID-19 immunity that it takes to stop the uncontrolled spread of virus.

Epidemiologists differ on herd immunity targets for COVID-19, with estimates varying from 60% to 90%.  But these estimates are just educated guesses.  Herd immunity is something observed, not something predicted.  When the rates of disease reach a stable low level, herd immunity has been achieved.  

Now some observations from my point of view.  Last week, without a decline in the number of tests performed, there were only 6 positive SARS-CoV-2 tests in the laboratory where I work.  Until last week, weekly positives have been in the double digits going back to April 2020, with a peak of 475 during the first week of this year.  Since the last week in February, the weekly number of positive tests have been below 40.  The curve has flattened, despite the lifting of many restrictions designed to prevent spread of the disease in Texas.  We can no longer say that there is a COVID-19 epidemic in my community.  Instead, the disease appears to have reached endemic levels here.  

I need to pause to explain what I mean.  Disease prevalence, which we’ve defined before, means the rate of disease in a population.  Prevalence can be applied to any disease, not just infectious disease; thus, we can speak of the prevalence of diabetes, of breast cancer, of heart disease, and so on.  Epidemic simply means increasing prevalence, just like acceleration means increasing speed.  Endemic means that disease prevalence is stable and not changing.  Epidemics can be local, meaning confined to a house or a neighborhood or a city or a country, or epidemics can be global, meaning happening all over the world at once.  Global epidemics are called pandemics.  The term “global pandemic” is as redundant as “unexpected surprise” or “advance warning.”

Herd immunity is achieved once an infectious disease reaches endemic levels, but what is that number?  Assuming natural and vaccine-induced immunity are the same thing, then herd immunity is the percentage of folks who have either had the infection or the vaccine when disease becomes endemic.  Today, it is estimated that 10% of Texans (2.8 out of 28 million) have had COVID-19, and that 35% of Texans have been fully vaccinated.  Therefore, my area seems to have achieved COVID-19 herd immunity at 45%.

This all sounds like great news, so why not throw our masks in the air and celebrate?  There are still unanswered questions.  Vaccine-induced immunity is not the same as natural immunity, but is it the same enough for calculating herd immunity?  How long does immunity last?  Can herd immunity be lost once achieved?  What will be the impact of emerging variants on immunity of individuals and populations?  And, most puzzling to me, why is the virus surging now in India and Brazil despite previous waves of infection?  

We still don’t know as much as we would like to believe.

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2021 COVID-19 Science Vaccine

Janssen Pause

These blogs advocate caution and skepticism, specifically in response to the COVID pandemic, but more generally in response to all “scientific” proclamations.  Don’t “follow the science” blindly.  Instead use your “smell test” before believing anything labelled as science.  Remember that science does not prove reality.  Instead, science proves what is not real.  We know much less than we would like to believe.

The sudden “pause” in vaccine rollout announced last week by Janssen is a case in point.  The pause follows reports of six cases of unusual blood clots following administration of the vaccine, tragically including one death.   

These unusual blood clots are called cerebral venous sinus thrombosis, or CVST, a condition which blocks the flow of blood out of the brain.  As a result, the blood vessels may burst causing a stroke which may permanently damage brain tissue.  So far, all patients are women under 50 years old with low platelet counts.   

An association between COVID-19 and CVST was noted before the Janssen vaccine was released.  In the August 2020 edition of the American Journal of Neuroradiology, Dr. D. D. Cavalcanti and associates reported three COVID-19 patients under 41 years old who developed CVST; all three patients died.  Others have reported similar associations between CVST and SARS-CoV-2 infection.  

This raises several questions.  Can CVST be caused by COVID-19?  Can CVST be caused by the Janssen vaccine? What about the mRNA vaccines?  And how is it that a vaccine causes a complication of the disease it’s meant to prevent?  Furthermore, six instances of CVST out of 6.8 million doses of the Janssen vaccine administered is a complication rate of less than 1 in 1,000,000.   The rate of anaphylaxis associated with the mRNA vaccines is 10 times as high.  Why so much concern for such a rare complication?

Something doesn’t smell right to me.

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2021 COVID-19 Science Testing Vaccine

Antibody Tests after Vaccination

The CDC recently updated guidelines for interpretation of SARS-CoV-2 antibody tests after infection and vaccination.  There is currently no recommendation to measure antibodies after vaccination to determine vaccine effectiveness.  Despite this, I know vaccinated individuals who measure antibodies anyway, and they are surprised when antibody tests come back negative.

Okay, full disclosure.  It was me.  And my wife.  We took the Janssen vaccine in mid-March, and I checked our SARS CoV-2 IgG antibodies last week.  They’re negative.  For both of us.  What’s going on here?  Isn’t the point of vaccination to stimulate the production of antibodies?

The answer is a qualified yes.  The qualification comes in two parts: the “scientific explanation” and my opinion.  

First the “scientific explanation”, simplified.  An individual may produce three types of antibodies against SARS-CoV-2: N, S or RBD. Infection stimulates the production of all three types of antibodies, but vaccine stimulates the production of S antibodies only.  Therefore, vaccinated individuals who have never been infected will be S-antibody positive, but N and RBD antibody negative.  If the antibody test is designed to detect N or RBD antibodies, but not S antibodies, then the result will be negative in those individuals.  On the other hand, detection of N or RBD antibodies in a vaccinated individual means that the individual has been exposed to the virus, either before or after vaccination.  The trouble is that the antibody tests available today by emergency authorizations do not specify which type of antibody is measured.   We do not know which antibody we are measuring unless we know details about the test, details that are usually not listed on the report from the lab.  

This explanation has precedent.  We know, for example, that Hepatitis B infection stimulates the production of two different types of antibodies: core antibody and surface antibody.  Hepatitis B vaccine only stimulates production of surface antibody; it does not stimulate production of core antibody.  Therefore, someone who is positive for surface antibody only has been vaccinated but has not been infected.  On the other hand, someone who is positive for both surface and core antibodies has been infected by Hepatitis B in the past.

All well and good for hepatitis, but what about SARS-CoV-2?  In the case of SARS-CoV-2, the “scientific explanation” is a hypothesis, meaning it is an educated guess.  Before we can say that we know something, we must compare our hypothesis to real-world observations.  There has not been enough time to observe the response that our bodies really have to vaccine.  It doesn’t make the hypothesis wrong, but it doesn’t make it right either.

My opinion?  The “scientific explanation” is still an opinion.

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2021 COVID-19 Vaccine

Anaphylaxis

In the revised EUA issued for its COVID vaccine on February 25, 2021, the FDA required Pfizer to updated its “Fact Sheet for Healthcare Providers” to include post-authorization adverse effects. As a result, Pfizer’s fact sheet now states, “Severe allergic reactions, including anaphylaxis [emphasis added], and other hypersensitivity reactions (e.g., rash, pruritus, urticaria, angioedema) have been reported following administration of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine during mass vaccination outside of clinical trials.”  Moderna did not receive the same mandate to revise its fact sheet, which still does not include a similar warning about anaphylaxis.  What is anaphylaxis and what are the facts about this life-threatening vaccination complication?

Anaphylaxis is a severe allergic reaction in which your body releases a flood of chemicals designed to modulate the immune response all at once.  The result is a sudden drop in blood pressure and narrowing of airways which can lead to fainting and death.  Some people are more prone to anaphylaxis than others, and some stimuli are more common causes of anaphylaxis than others.  Peanuts and bee stings are common examples.  The allergic response can be effectively reversed by an injection of epinephrine.  Susceptible individuals (and you know who you are) often carry EpiPens to self-administer a dose of epinephrine in case of a reaction.

Anaphylaxis can occur anytime something is injected in the body, although the risk is exceedingly low.  However, the rate of anaphylaxis after the mRNA vaccines is about ten times higher than the rate of pre-COVID vaccines.  If this is the case, then why did Pfizer’s new EUA highlight this potential complication and Moderna’s did not?  The answer may be related to initial experience with the two vaccines.  Since Pfizer received authorization for its vaccine first, increased anaphylaxishad already been observed in association with the Pfizer vaccine before Moderna even received its EUA.  The reputation stuck.  Although initial reports suggested that Pfizer caused more than twice as many anaphylaxis reactions as Moderna, subsequent experience has shown that both mRNA vaccines have about the same rate of anaphylaxis.  According to a March 16 CDC report 1,913 deaths have been reported associated with vaccine administration after more than 109 million doses.  Reports of recent VAERS data searches, the FDA database collecting vaccine adverse events, suggest that the rate of anaphylaxis deaths are similar for the two vaccine manufacturers.  The Janssen recombinant vector vaccine appears to be associated with fewer cases of anaphylaxis than the mRNA vaccines; time will tell whether this observation sticks or is skewed by the fewer number of vaccines administered so far.  The CDC recommends that all vaccination administration sites be prepared for potential anaphylaxis reactions, including educating staff on the signs and symptoms of anaphylaxis and having at least three epinephrine doses on hand at all times.

A few sensible conclusions may be drawn from this information.  

  • Ask the person administering your vaccine what would happen if you had an anaphylaxis response.
  • If you have an EpiPen, bring it with you when you get your vaccine.
  • If you have had a severe allergic reaction in the past, consider deferring vaccination or taking the Janssen (Johnson and Johnson) vaccine instead of an mRNA vaccine.