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Vaccine Immune Response and Side Effects with the Use of Acetaminophen with Influenza Vaccine

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Date 1994 Mar 1
PMID 7496933
Citations 7
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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine whether acetaminophen impairs the immune response to influenza vaccine. Influenza vaccine is an under-utilized preventive measure, partly because of the unfounded perception that fever and myalgias frequently follow vaccination. While acetaminophen may decrease these infrequent side effects, it may also alter the immune response to vaccination. We compare the effect of acetaminophen with placebo on the humoral immune response to the 1991-1992 commercially available influenza vaccine. We studied 60 healthy, elderly subjects from a geriatric clinic and 20 infirm, elderly subjects from a nursing home. The subjects were randomly assigned to receive placebo or acetaminophen (1,000 mg every 6 h) for 2 days. Acetaminophen did not depress or enhance the immune development of serum hemagglutination inhibition antibody to the three vaccine antigens. The systemic side effects of fever and myalgia were uncommon in both groups. The healthy elderly subjects mounted a significantly better immune response to the influenza virus A/Taiwan/1/86 (H1N1) vaccine strain than did the infirm elderly subjects (geometric mean titer, 115 versus 51; P = 0.003). The functional activity score obtained by using the chronic healthy evaluation component of the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation system could be used to distinguish the healthy from the infirm elderly (scores of 1.27 versus 3.75, P < 0.001). Acetaminophen neither depressed nor enhanced the serum antibody response to the vaccine in the healthy and infirm elderly subjects studied.

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