COVID-19 vaccination safety and associated health care utilization among adults with inflammatory bowel disease – a population-based self-controlled case series analysis

Author:

Lee Jennifer J. Y.ORCID,Bernatsky SashaORCID,Benchimol Eric I.ORCID,Kuenzig M. EllenORCID,Kwong Jeffrey C.ORCID,Li QingORCID,Widdifield JessicaORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background and aims There is an incomplete understanding of the full safety profiles of repeated COVID-19 vaccinations in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Among individuals with IBD, we assessed whether COVID-19 vaccines were associated with serious adverse events of special interest (AESI) and health care utilization [all-cause hospitalizations, Emergency Department (ED) visits, gastroenterology visits, IBD-related visits]. Methods Using comprehensive administrative health data from Ontario, Canada, adults with IBD who received at least one COVID-19 vaccine from December 2020-January 2022 were included. Self-controlled case series analyses were conducted to evaluate the relative incidence rates of AESI and health care utilization outcomes across post-vaccination risk and control periods. Results Among 88,407 IBD patients, 99.7% received mRNA vaccines and 75.9% received  3 doses. Relative to control periods, we did not detect an increase in AESI. IBD patients had fewer all-cause hospitalizations during post-vaccination risk periods. Patients experienced more all-cause ED visits after dose 2 [Relative Incidence (RI):1.08(95%CI:1.04–1.12)] but fewer visits after doses 3 [RI:0.85 (95%CI:0.81–0.90)] and 4 [RI:0.73 (95%CI:0.57–0.92)]. There was no increase in gastroenterologist visits or IBD-related health care utilization post-vaccination. There were fewer IBD-related hospitalizations after dose 1 [RI:0.84 (95%CI:0.72–0.98)] and 3 [RI:0.63 (95%CI:0.52–0.76)], fewer IBD-related ED visits after dose 3 [RI:0.81 (95%CI:0.71–0.91)] and 4 [RI:0.55 (95%CI:0.32–0.96)], and fewer outpatient visits after dose 2 [RI:0.91 (95%CI:0.90–0.93)] and 3 [RI:0.87 (95%CI:0.86–0.89)]. Conclusion This population-based study did not detect increased AESI, all-cause or IBD-related health care utilization following COVID-19 vaccination, suggesting a lack of association between vaccination and increased disease activity.

Funder

James McGill Professor of Medicine

Northbridge Financial Corporation Chair in Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Public Health Agency of Canada

Arthritis Society Stars Career Development Award

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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