Author: Kissling, Esther; Hooiveld, Mariëtte; Brytting, Mia; Vilcu, Anaâ€Maria; de Lange, Marit; MartÃnezâ€Baz, Iván; Sigerson, Debbie; Enkirch, Theresa; Belhillil, Sylvie; Meijer, Adam; Castilla, Jesus; William, Naoma; Carnahan, AnnaSara; Falchi, Alessandra; Hendriksen, Janneke; Casado, Itziar; Murray, Josie; Enouf, Vincent; Dijkstra, Frederika; Marques, Diogo F. P.; Valenciano, Marta
Title: Absence of association between 2019â€20 influenza vaccination and COVIDâ€19: Results of the European Iâ€MOVEâ€COVIDâ€19 primary care project, Marchâ€August 2020 Cord-id: rvce4x5x Document date: 2021_1_22
ID: rvce4x5x
Snippet: BACKGROUND: Claims of influenza vaccination increasing COVIDâ€19 risk are circulating. Within the Iâ€MOVEâ€COVIDâ€19 primary care multicentre study, we measured the association between 2019â€20 influenza vaccination and COVIDâ€19. METHODS: We conducted a multicentre testâ€negative caseâ€control study at primary care level, in study sites in five European countries, from March to August 2020. Patients presenting with acute respiratory infection were swabbed, with demographic, 2019â€20 in
Document: BACKGROUND: Claims of influenza vaccination increasing COVIDâ€19 risk are circulating. Within the Iâ€MOVEâ€COVIDâ€19 primary care multicentre study, we measured the association between 2019â€20 influenza vaccination and COVIDâ€19. METHODS: We conducted a multicentre testâ€negative caseâ€control study at primary care level, in study sites in five European countries, from March to August 2020. Patients presenting with acute respiratory infection were swabbed, with demographic, 2019â€20 influenza vaccination and clinical information documented. Using logistic regression, we measured the adjusted odds ratio (aOR), adjusting for study site and age, sex, calendar time, presence of chronic conditions. The main analysis included patients swabbed ≤7 days after onset from the three countries with <15% of missing influenza vaccination. In secondary analyses, we included five countries, using multiple imputation with chained equations to account for missing data. RESULTS: We included 257 COVIDâ€19 cases and 1631 controls in the main analysis (three countries). The overall aOR between influenza vaccination and COVIDâ€19 was 0.93 (95% CI: 0.66â€1.32). The aOR was 0.92 (95% CI: 0.58â€1.46) and 0.92 (95% CI: 0.51â€1.67) among those aged 20â€59 and ≥60 years, respectively. In secondary analyses, we included 6457 cases and 69 272 controls. The imputed aOR was 0.87 (95% CI: 0.79â€0.95) among all ages and any delay between swab and symptom onset. CONCLUSIONS: There was no evidence that COVIDâ€19 cases were more likely to be vaccinated against influenza than controls. Influenza vaccination should be encouraged among target groups for vaccination. Iâ€MOVEâ€COVIDâ€19 will continue documenting influenza vaccination status in 2020â€21, in order to learn about effects of recent influenza vaccination.
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