Karina A. Top, Paula Brna, Lingyun Ye and Bruce Smith. Risk
of seizures after immunization in children with epilepsy: a risk interval
analysis. BMC Pediatrics 2018 18:134
https://bmcpediatr.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12887-018-1112-0
Abstract
Background
In children with epilepsy, fever and infection can trigger
seizures. Immunization can also induce inflammation and fever, which could
theoretically trigger a seizure. The risk of seizure after immunization in
children with pre-existing epilepsy is not known. The study objective was to
determine the risk of medically attended seizure after immunization in children
with epilepsy < 7 years of age.
Methods
We conducted a retrospective study of children < 7 years
of age with epilepsy in Nova Scotia, Canada from 2010 to 2014.
Hospitalizations, emergency visits, unscheduled clinic visits, and telephone
calls for seizures were extracted from medical records. Immunization records
were obtained from family physicians and Public Health with informed consent.
We conducted a risk interval analysis to estimate the relative risk (RR) of
seizure during risk periods 0–14, 0–2, and 5–14 days post-immunization versus a
control period 21–83 days post-immunization.
Results
There were 302 children with epilepsy who were eligible for
the study. Immunization records were retrieved on 147 patients (49%), of whom
80 (54%) had one or more immunizations between the epilepsy diagnosis date and
age 7 years. These 80 children had 161 immunization visits and 197 medically
attended seizures. Children with immunizations had more seizures than either those
with no immunizations or those with no records (mean 2.5 versus 0.7 versus 0.9,
p < 0.001). The risk of medically attended seizure was not increased 0–14
days after any vaccine (RR = 1.1, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.5–2.8) or 0–2
days after inactivated vaccines (RR = 0.9, 95% CI: 0.1–7.1) versus 21–83 days
post-immunization. No seizure events occurred 5–14 days after live vaccines.
Conclusions
Children with epilepsy do not appear to be at increased risk
of medically attended seizure following immunization. These findings suggest
that immunization is safe in children with epilepsy, with benefits outweighing
risks.
Courtesy of: https://www.mdlinx.com/neurology/medical-news-article/2018/04/17/adverse-event-following-immunization-epilepsy-seizure/7510498
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