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Vaccine contraindications and precautions

Vaccine contraindications and precautions

Vaccine contraindications and precautions

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Definitions - Stop vs. Slow Down

  • Contraindication (STOP 🛑): A condition that severely ↑ the risk of a serious adverse reaction. The vaccine must not be given.

    • Example: Anaphylaxis to a previous dose.
  • Precaution (SLOW DOWN ⚠️): A condition that may ↑ the risk of an adverse event or ↓ vaccine efficacy. Vaccination should generally be deferred; risk vs. benefit analysis is key.

    • Example: Moderate-to-severe acute illness (with or without fever).

⭐ A severe allergic reaction (e.g., anaphylaxis) after a previous dose or to a vaccine component is a true contraindication to subsequent doses.

Live Vaccines - Handle with Care

📌 Mnemonic: BOY, This Real Virus is Live

  • BCG
  • OPV (Oral Polio)
  • Yellow Fever
  • Typhoid (Oral Ty21a)
  • Rotavirus
  • Varicella
  • Influenza (intranasal)
  • MMR (Measles, Mumps, Rubella)

⚠️ Absolute Contraindications

  • Pregnancy: Teratogenic risk. Avoid conception for 4 weeks post-vaccination.
  • Severe Immunodeficiency: Risk of disseminated disease.
    • Primary Immunodeficiencies: SCID, CVID, DiGeorge syndrome.
    • Leukemia, Lymphoma, generalized malignancy.
    • Chemotherapy or radiation therapy (wait 3 months after stopping).
    • High-dose corticosteroids:
      • 2 mg/kg/day or ≥20 mg/day if taken for >14 days.
      • Wait 1 month after discontinuation.

⭐ In HIV-infected children, MMR & Varicella vaccines are NOT contraindicated if CD4 count is adequate (CD4% ≥15% for age <5 yrs; CD4 count ≥200/μL for age >5 yrs).

💡 Precautions (Weigh Risk vs. Benefit)

  • Recent Blood/Antibody Products:
    • Antibodies can neutralize the vaccine virus.
    • Defer MMR/Varicella for 3-11 months depending on the product received.
  • Moderate or Severe Acute Illness: Defer until recovery.
  • Household Contacts of Immunocompromised:
    • MMR & Varicella are safe.
    • Rotavirus: Theoretical risk of transmission; counsel on hand hygiene.
    • OPV: Not used in developed countries due to VAPP risk.

Specific Vaccines - Tricky Scenarios

  • BCG: No scar post-vaccination? → Revaccinate if Mantoux test is < 5 mm. Give to asymptomatic HIV-positive infants.
  • Hepatitis B: Mother is HBsAg-positive? → Give vaccine + Hepatitis B Immunoglobulin (HBIG) at birth, at different sites.
  • OPV: Child vomits within 30 minutes? → Repeat the dose.
  • Measles: Outbreak situation? → Give an additional dose at 6-9 months. This does not replace the scheduled 9-month dose.
  • DTP: History of encephalopathy within 7 days of a previous dose? → Pertussis component is contraindicated. Use DT instead.

Hepatitis B Vaccine Management for HBV-Exposed Infants

⭐ Egg allergy is NOT a contraindication for the measles vaccine. The vaccine is prepared on a chick embryo fibroblast culture, not the egg itself.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Live vaccines are contraindicated in immunocompromised states and pregnancy.
  • Anaphylaxis to a prior dose or vaccine component is an absolute contraindication for all vaccines.
  • Encephalopathy within 7 days of a previous DTP/DTaP dose is a contraindication for further doses.
  • Egg allergy: Influenza and Yellow Fever vaccines require caution, but anaphylaxis is a contraindication.
  • Rotavirus vaccine is contraindicated in infants with a history of intussusception or SCID.
  • MMR & Varicella are contraindicated with neomycin anaphylaxis.

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