Author: de la Fuente, José; Armas, Octavio; Sánchezâ€RodrÃguez, Luis; Gortázar, Christian; Lukashev, Alexander N.
Title: Citizen science initiative points at childhood BCG vaccination as a risk factor for COVIDâ€19 Cord-id: c1umbrjq Document date: 2021_4_20
ID: c1umbrjq
Snippet: Current results do not provide conclusive evidence on the effect of BCG vaccination on COVIDâ€19 alone or in combination with other factors. To address this limitation, in this study we used a citizen science initiative on the COVIDâ€19 pandemic to collect data worldwide during 2 October 2020–30 October 2020 (1,233 individuals) in a structured way for analysing factors and characteristics of affected individuals in relation to BCG vaccination. For the first time, the results of our study sug
Document: Current results do not provide conclusive evidence on the effect of BCG vaccination on COVIDâ€19 alone or in combination with other factors. To address this limitation, in this study we used a citizen science initiative on the COVIDâ€19 pandemic to collect data worldwide during 2 October 2020–30 October 2020 (1,233 individuals) in a structured way for analysing factors and characteristics of affected individuals in relation to BCG vaccination. For the first time, the results of our study suggested that vaccination with BCG may increase the risk for COVIDâ€19 at certain age, particularly in individuals vaccinated at childhood. Childhood BCG vaccination increased the likelihood of being diagnosed with COVIDâ€19 fivefold in COVIDâ€19 lowâ€incidence countries and threefold in highâ€incidence countries. A reasonable explanation for this effect is the activation of certain innate immunity mechanisms associated with inflammatory reactions. These factors should be considered when analysing the risks associated with this global pandemic.
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