Litcius/Paper detail

Breed, smaller weight, and multiple injections are associated with increased adverse event reports within three days following canine vaccine administration

George E. Moore, JoAnn Morrison, Emi K. Saito, Nathaniel Spofford, Mike Yang

2023Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association12 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate patient and vaccine factors associated with adverse events (AEs) recorded within 3 days of vaccine administration in a large cohort of dogs. ANIMALS: 4,654,187 dogs vaccinated in 16,087,455 office visits in a 5-year period at 1,119 hospitals of a corporate practice. METHODS: Electronic medical records of dogs vaccinated between January 1, 2016, and December 31, 2020, were searched for diagnoses of possible AEs recorded within 3 days of administration of vaccines without concurrent injectable heartworm preventative. Patient risk factors (age, sex, breed, and weight) and number and type of vaccine were extracted from records. ORs (and 95% CIs) for risk factors were estimated via multivariable logistic regression mixed models with patient as a random effect. RESULTS: AEs were recorded following 31,197 vaccination visits (0.19%, or 19.4/10,000 visits). Reported AE rates increased from 1 to 4 vaccines administered and among individual vaccines were greatest for rabies vaccine. AE rate was generally inversely related to body weight, with largest rates in dogs ≤ 5 kg. The largest AE rates were noted in French Bulldogs and Dachshunds (ORs > 4 compared to mixed-breed dogs). CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Risk factor information can be used to update vaccination protocols and client communication. Breed differences may indicate genetics as the primary risk factor for adverse vaccine reactions following vaccinations.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineVaccinationAdverse effectBreedLogistic regressionMedical recordPediatricsInternal medicineImmunologyAnimal scienceBiologyVirology and Viral DiseasesRabies epidemiology and controlVeterinary Oncology Research