4.5 Review

Intradermal Vaccination: A Potential Tool in the Battle Against the COVID-19 Pandemic?

Journal

RISK MANAGEMENT AND HEALTHCARE POLICY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages 2079-2087

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/RMHP.S309707

Keywords

vaccination; intradermal; COVID-19; dose sparing

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The narrative review suggests that fractional intradermal vaccination can be an effective and efficient strategy for certain vaccines such as influenza, rabies, and hepatitis B. More research is needed for vaccines against other pathogens, but initial findings are promising. During a shortage of COVID-19 vaccines, exploring fractional dosing schemes could help save doses and achieve herd immunity quickly.
This narrative review is the final output of an initiative of the SIM (Italian Society of Mesotherapy). A narrative review of scientific literature on the efficacy of fractional intradermal vaccination in comparison with full doses has been conducted for the following pathogens: influenza virus, rabies virus, poliovirus (PV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis A virus (HAV), diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis bacterias (DTP), human papillomavirus (HPV), Japanese encephalitis virus (JE), meningococcus, varicella zoster virus (VZV) and yellow fever virus. The findings suggest that the use of the intradermal route represents a valid strategy in terms of efficacy and efficiency for influenza, rabies and HBV vaccines. Some systematic reviews on influenza vaccines suggest the absence of a substantial difference between immunogenicity induced by a fractional ID dose of up to 20% and the IM dose in healthy adults, elderly, immunocompromised patients and children. Clinical studies of remaining vaccines against other pathogens (HAV, DTP bacterias, JE, meningococcal disease, VZV, and yellow fever virus) are scarce, but promising. In the context of a COVID-19 vaccine shortage, countries should investigate if a fractional dosing scheme may help to save doses and achieve herd immunity quickly. SIM urges the scientific community and health authorities to investigate the potentiality of fractionate intradermal administration in anti-COVID-19 vaccination.

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