Franchini Massimo, Cappello Emiliano, Valdiserra Giulia, Bonaso Marco, Moretti Ugo, Focosi Daniele, Tuccori Marco
Division of Transfusion Medicine, Carlo Poma Hospital, Mantua, Italy.
Unit of Pharmacology and Pharmacovigilance, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy.
Semin Thromb Hemost. 2023 Feb;49(1):15-26. doi: 10.1055/s-0042-1754389. Epub 2022 Sep 2.
Acquired hemophilia A (AHA), a rare but life-threatening disorder, most commonly occurs in older people and during pregnancy. During the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination campaign, an unexpected number of newly diagnosed AHA patients have been identified in clinical practice that were temporally related to COVID-19 vaccination. We present the result of a signal detection analysis aimed at exploring a possible association between COVID-19 immunization and occurrence of AHA. A disproportionality analysis on the World Health Organization (WHO) database was performed to investigate the presence of a signal of risk for AHA associated with COVID-19 vaccines. Reports of AHA associated with any COVID-19 vaccine included in the WHO database were then integrated with those available on the Food and Drug Administration Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System and those published in the medical literature. The WHO database included 146 reports of AHA. The information component (IC) was significant for the association of AHA with all COVID-19 vaccines (IC025: 1.1) and with the vaccine product BNT162b2 (IC025: 1.6). After duplicate exclusion, 96 unique cases of AHA following COVID-19 vaccines have been reviewed. Median time to diagnosis was 18 days and 40% of cases documented the occurrence after the second dose. Overall, in 57% of the investigated cases, a preexisting condition predisposing to AHA was excluded. About 22% of cases occurred in subjects with age ≤65 years and there was no case associated with pregnancy. Mortality was 11%. Although we cannot exclude that the unexpected frequency of AHA diagnosis can be explained by a detection bias, the signal for COVID-19 vaccine-related AHA is robust and deserves further investigations.
获得性血友病A(AHA)是一种罕见但危及生命的疾病,最常见于老年人和孕期。在2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)疫苗接种期间,临床实践中发现了数量意外的新诊断AHA患者,这些患者在时间上与COVID-19疫苗接种相关。我们展示了一项信号检测分析的结果,旨在探索COVID-19免疫与AHA发生之间的可能关联。对世界卫生组织(WHO)数据库进行了不成比例分析,以调查与COVID-19疫苗相关的AHA风险信号的存在情况。然后将WHO数据库中包含的与任何COVID-19疫苗相关的AHA报告,与美国食品药品监督管理局疫苗不良事件报告系统中的报告以及医学文献中发表的报告进行整合。WHO数据库包含146例AHA报告。信息成分(IC)对于AHA与所有COVID-19疫苗的关联(IC025:1.1)以及与疫苗产品BNT162b2的关联(IC025:1.6)具有显著性。在排除重复病例后,对96例COVID-19疫苗接种后出现的AHA独特病例进行了回顾。诊断的中位时间为18天,40%的病例记录在第二剂疫苗接种后发生。总体而言,在57%的调查病例中,排除了易患AHA的既往疾病。约22%的病例发生在年龄≤65岁的受试者中,且没有与妊娠相关的病例。死亡率为11%。尽管我们不能排除AHA诊断的意外频率可能由检测偏倚解释,但COVID-19疫苗相关AHA的信号是强烈的,值得进一步研究。