Faculté de médecine et pharmacie, University of Poitiers, Poitiers, France; Service de maladies infectieuses et tropicales, CHU de Poitiers, Poitiers, France.
Service de médecine interne, CHU de Poitiers, Poitiers, France.
Med Mal Infect. 2020 May;50(3):263-268. doi: 10.1016/j.medmal.2019.11.006. Epub 2019 Dec 14.
Chemotherapy increases the risk of infections, often severe, and some of them are vaccine-preventable infections. We aimed to assess vaccination coverage and associated factors in oncology and hematology patients.
Consecutive adult patients followed in a French university hospital for hematological malignancy or solid cancer voluntarily completed an anonymous questionnaire in September and October 2016. It included questions on underlying disease, chemotherapy, flu, and pneumococcal vaccination uptakes, and attitudes toward vaccination. Factors associated with vaccination uptake were assessed by multivariate logistic regression.
The response rate was 41.9% (N=671) among 1,600 questionnaires distributed; 232 patients had underlying hematological malignancy and 439 had solid cancer. Half of the patients were aged over 65 years. Chemotherapy was ongoing or discontinued for less than one year in 74.7% of patients. In patients aged <65 years undergoing chemotherapy, flu vaccination rate was 19.9% whereas patients aged >65 years had coverage of 47%. Pneumococcal vaccine uptake was 7.3%. However, 64.7% of patients were favorable to vaccination. Vaccine uptake was associated with age >65 years (OR 4.5 [2.9-7.0]), information about vaccination delivered by the family physician (OR 12.9 [5.5-30.1]), follow-up in hematology unit (OR 2.0 [1.3-3.1]), and positive opinion about vaccination (OR 2.0 [1.3-3.1]).
Despite specific recommendations regarding immunocompromised patients, anti-pneumococcal and flu vaccinations were rarely conducted, even in elderly patients. Targeted information campaigns to family physicians, oncologists, and patients should be implemented to improve vaccine coverage in patients with underlying malignancies.
化疗会增加感染的风险,其中一些感染较为严重,有些是可以通过疫苗预防的感染。我们旨在评估肿瘤学和血液学患者的疫苗接种率和相关因素。
2016 年 9 月至 10 月,连续在法国一家大学医院接受血液恶性肿瘤或实体瘤治疗的成年患者自愿填写匿名问卷。问卷包括基础疾病、化疗、流感和肺炎球菌疫苗接种情况以及对疫苗接种的态度等问题。通过多变量逻辑回归评估与疫苗接种率相关的因素。
在分发的 1600 份问卷中,有 41.9%(671 份)的患者做出了回应;其中 232 例患者患有血液恶性肿瘤,439 例患者患有实体瘤。一半的患者年龄在 65 岁以上。74.7%的患者正在接受化疗或化疗结束不到一年。在<65 岁接受化疗的患者中,流感疫苗接种率为 19.9%,而>65 岁的患者覆盖率为 47%。肺炎球菌疫苗接种率为 7.3%。然而,64.7%的患者赞成接种疫苗。疫苗接种与年龄>65 岁(OR 4.5[2.9-7.0])、家庭医生提供的疫苗接种信息(OR 12.9[5.5-30.1])、在血液科病房接受随访(OR 2.0[1.3-3.1])和对疫苗接种的积极看法(OR 2.0[1.3-3.1])有关。
尽管针对免疫功能低下的患者有具体的建议,但抗肺炎球菌和流感疫苗接种很少进行,即使是在老年患者中。应针对家庭医生、肿瘤学家和患者开展有针对性的宣传活动,以提高基础恶性肿瘤患者的疫苗接种率。