Seok Hung Youl, Shin Ha Young, Kim Jong Kuk, Kim Byoung Joon, Oh Jeeyoung, Suh Bum Chun, Kim Sun Young, Kang Sa Yoon, Ahn Suk Won, Bae Jong Seok, Kim Byung Jo
Department of Neurology, Korea University Medical Center, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Department of Neurology, Keimyung University School of Medicine, Daegu, Korea.
J Clin Neurol. 2017 Oct;13(4):325-330. doi: 10.3988/jcn.2017.13.4.325.
Upper respiratory infection (URI), including influenza, may exacerbate the symptoms of myasthenia gravis (MG), which is an autoimmune disease that causes muscle weakness. There is also concern that the influenza vaccine may trigger or worsen autoimmune diseases. The objective of this study was to determine the impacts of influenza infection and vaccination on symptom severity in MG patients.
Patients diagnosed with MG were enrolled from 10 university-affiliated hospitals between March and August 2015. Subjects completed a questionnaire at the first routine follow-up visit after enrolling in the study. The patient history was obtained to determine whether a URI had been experienced during the previous winter, if an influenza vaccination had been administered before the previous winter, and whether their MG symptoms were exacerbated during or following either a URI or vaccination. Influenza-like illness (ILI) was defined and differentiated from the common cold as a fever of ≥38°C accompanied by a cough and/or a sore throat.
Of the 258 enrolled patients [aged 54.1±15.2 years (mean±SD), 112 men, and 185 with generalized MG], 133 (51.6%) had received an influenza vaccination and 121 (46.9%) had experienced a common cold (96 patients) or ILI (25 patients) during the analysis period. MG symptoms were aggravated in 10 (40%) patients after ILI, whereas only 2 (1.5%) experienced aggravation following influenza vaccination. The rate of symptom aggravation was significantly higher in patients experiencing an ILI (10/25, 40%) than in those with the common cold (15/96, 15.6%, p=0.006).
The results of this study suggest that the potential risk of aggravating autoimmune disease is higher for ILI than for influenza vaccination, which further suggests that influenza vaccination can be offered to patients with MG.
上呼吸道感染(URI),包括流感,可能会加重重症肌无力(MG)的症状,重症肌无力是一种导致肌肉无力的自身免疫性疾病。也有人担心流感疫苗可能引发或加重自身免疫性疾病。本研究的目的是确定流感感染和接种疫苗对MG患者症状严重程度的影响。
2015年3月至8月期间,从10家大学附属医院招募了被诊断为MG的患者。受试者在纳入研究后的首次常规随访时完成一份问卷。获取患者病史,以确定在前一个冬季是否经历过URI、在前一个冬季之前是否接种过流感疫苗,以及在URI或接种疫苗期间或之后其MG症状是否加重。将流感样疾病(ILI)定义为体温≥38°C并伴有咳嗽和/或喉咙痛,并与普通感冒相区分。
在258名纳入研究的患者中[年龄54.1±15.2岁(均值±标准差),112名男性,185名全身型MG患者],133名(51.6%)接种过流感疫苗,121名(46.9%)在分析期间经历过普通感冒(96例患者)或ILI(25例患者)。ILI后10名(40%)患者的MG症状加重,而流感疫苗接种后只有2名(1.5%)患者症状加重。ILI患者的症状加重率(10/25,40%)显著高于普通感冒患者(15/96,15.6%,p = 0.006)。
本研究结果表明,ILI加重自身免疫性疾病的潜在风险高于流感疫苗接种,这进一步表明MG患者可以接种流感疫苗。