4.5 Article

Preferences for COVID-19 Vaccination in People With Chronic Immune-Mediated Inflammatory Diseases

期刊

JOURNAL OF RHEUMATOLOGY
卷 50, 期 7, 页码 949-957

出版社

J RHEUMATOL PUBL CO
DOI: 10.3899/jrheum.220697

关键词

Key Indexing Terms; autoimmune diseases; COVID-19 vaccines; inflammatory bowel diseases; patient preference; rheumatoid arthritis; systemic lupus erythematosus

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This study aimed to understand how people with chronic immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs) weigh the benefits and risks of COVID-19 vaccine options. The results showed that vaccine effectiveness, disease flare risk, rare but serious risks, and number/timing of injections were the most important attributes for patients. Overall, patients perceived the benefits of COVID-19 vaccination to outweigh the rare serious risks and disease flare.
Objective. To understand how people with chronic immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs) trade off the benefits and risks of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccine options.Methods. We conducted an online discrete-choice experiment in people with IMIDs to quantify the relative importance (RI) of attributes relevant to COVID-19 vaccination. Participants were recruited between May and August 2021 through patient groups and clinics in Canada, and completed 10 choices where they selected 1 of 2 hypothetical vaccine options or no vaccine. The RI of each attribute was estimated and heterogeneity was explored through latent class analysis.Results. The survey was completed by 551 people (89% female, mean age 46 yrs) with a range of IMIDs (inflammatory bowel disease [48% ], rheumatoid arthritis [38%], systemic lupus erythematosus [16%]). Most had received 1 (94%) or 2 (64%) COVID-19 vaccinations. Across the ranges of levels considered, vaccine effectiveness was most important (RI = 66%), followed by disease flare (21%), rare but serious risks (9%), and number/timing of injections (4%). Patients would accept a risk of disease flare requiring a treatment change of & LE; 8.8% for a vaccine with a small absolute increase in effectiveness (10%). Of the 3 latent classes, the group with the greatest aversion to disease flare were more likely to be male and have lower incomes, but this group still valued effectiveness higher than other attributes.Conclusion. Patients perceived the benefits of COVID-19 vaccination to outweigh rare serious risks and disease flare. This supports COVID-19 vaccine strategies that maximize effectiveness, while recognizing the heterogeneity in preferences that exists.

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