PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers urge greater awareness of delayed skin reactions to Moderna COVID-19 vaccine

These reactions should not discourage patients from getting the vaccine, say researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital

Researchers urge greater awareness of delayed skin reactions to Moderna COVID-19 vaccine
2021-03-04
(Press-News.org) BOSTON - As the speed and scale of vaccinations against the SARS-CoV-2 virus ramps up globally, researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) are calling for greater awareness and communication around a delayed injection-site reaction that can occur in some patients who have received the Moderna mRNA-1273 vaccine.

In a letter to the editor published online in The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), the authors note Phase 3 clinical data from the Moderna vaccine trial did show delayed skin hypersensitivity in a small number of the more than 30,000 trial participants. However, the authors say the large, red, sometimes raised, itchy or painful skin reactions were never fully characterized or explained, and they warn clinicians may not be prepared to recognize them and guide patients on treatment options and completion of the second dose of the vaccine.

"Whether you've experienced a rash at the injection site right away or this delayed skin reaction, neither condition should prevent you from getting the second dose of the vaccine," says Kimberly Blumenthal, MD, MSc, lead author of the letter and co-director of the Clinical Epidemiology Program in the division of Rheumatology, Allergy and Immunology at MGH. "Our immediate goal is to make physicians and other care providers aware of this possible delayed reaction, so they are not alarmed, but instead well-informed and equipped to advise their patients accordingly."

In the letter, Blumenthal and her co-authors also note their own clinical observations of the delayed, large, local reactions to the Moderna vaccine, and report on a series of 12 patients with the reactions. In that group, symptom onset ranged from four days after the first dose up to 11 days post-vaccination, with a median onset of symptoms on day eight. Photographs show the varied size and severity of the reactions. Most patients were treated with ice and antihistamines, although some required corticosteroids and one was erroneously treated with antibiotics.

"Delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity could be confused - by clinicians and patients alike - with a skin infection," says letter co-author Erica Shenoy, MD, PhD, associate chief of the MGH Infection Control Unit. "These types of reactions, however, are not infectious and thus should not be treated with antibiotics."

On average, symptoms cleared up after nearly a week for the group of 12 reported in the letter. Half of the patients went on to experience a reaction after the second dose - at or around 48 hours post-vaccination. No patient experienced a dose two reaction that was more severe than their dose one reaction.

The authors also say samples taken from skin biopsies confirmed their suspicion of a delayed allergic immune response that is commonly seen in drug reactions. "For most people who are experiencing this, we believe it's tied to the body's immune system going to work," says Esther Freeman, MD, PhD, director of Global Health Dermatology at MGH and co-author of the NEJM letter. "Overall, this data is reassuring and should not discourage people from getting the vaccine."

INFORMATION:

To learn more about potentially allergic reactions after COVID-19 vaccination, MGH Allergy is collecting all immediate and delayed reactions in a designated registry. Additional co-authors of the NEJM letter were Aleena Banerji, MD, Ruth Foreman, MD, PhD, Dean Hashimoto, MD, Lacey Robinson, MD, MPH, Rebecca Saff, MD, and Anna Wolfson, MD, all from MGH; Lily Li, MD, of Brigham and Women's Hospital; and Sara Anvari, MD, MSc, Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children's Hospital.

About the Massachusetts General Hospital Massachusetts General Hospital, founded in 1811, is the original and largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. The END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Researchers urge greater awareness of delayed skin reactions to Moderna COVID-19 vaccine

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Gender assumptions harm progress on climate adaption and resilience

Gender assumptions harm progress on climate adaption and resilience
2021-03-04
Scientists say outdated assumptions around gender continue to hinder effective and fair policymaking and action for climate mitigation and adaptation. Lead author of a new study, Dr Jacqueline Lau from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook University (Coral CoE at JCU) and WorldFish, said gender--alongside other identities like race, class and age--has a powerful influence on people's experience of, and resilience to, climate change. She said the four most common and interlinked assumptions found are: women are innately caring and connected to the environment; women are a homogenous and vulnerable group; gender equality is a women's issue and; gender equality ...

Neuroimaging reveals how ideology affects race perception

2021-03-03
ITHACA, N.Y. - How might people's political ideology affect their perception of race? Previous research by Amy Krosch, assistant professor of psychology in the College of Arts and Sciences, has shown that white people who identify themselves as political conservatives tend to have a lower threshold for seeing mixed-race Black and white faces as Black. More often than liberals, Krosch found, white political conservatives show a form of social discrimination termed "hypodescent" - categorizing multiracial individuals as members of the "socially subordinate" racial group. In new research published Feb. 22 in Philosophical Transactions of Royal Society B, Krosch used neuroimaging to show that this effect seems to be driven by white ...

Lessons from Wuhan: What managers and employees need to know

2021-03-03
As COVID-19 lockdowns and quarantines are lifted, businesses are now faced with the challenge of how to keep their employees who are returning to work motivated and engaged. A study led by a University of Illinois Chicago researcher shows that both employees and managers have an important part to play in promoting employee engagement during the pandemic. The research, published in the Journal of Applied Psychology, suggests employee engagement and performance are the highest when employees are mentally prepared for their return to work and their managers are strongly committed to employees' health and safety at work. "Given the turmoil and distress during lockdowns ...

NASA scientists complete 1st global survey of freshwater fluctuation

NASA scientists complete 1st global survey of freshwater fluctuation
2021-03-03
To investigate humans' impact on freshwater resources, scientists have now conducted the first global accounting of fluctuating water levels in Earth's lakes and reservoirs - including ones previously too small to measure from space. The research, published March 3 in the journal Nature, relied on NASA's Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite 2 (ICESat-2), launched in September 2018. ICESat-2 sends 10,000 laser light pulses every second down to Earth. When reflected back to the satellite, those pulses deliver high-precision surface height measurements every 28 inches (70 centimeters) along the satellite's orbit. With these trillions of data points, scientists can distinguish more features of Earth's surface, like small lakes and ponds, and track them over ...

Climate change 'winners' may owe financial compensation to polluters

2021-03-03
Climate change is generally portrayed as an environmental and societal threat with entirely negative consequences. However, some sectors of the global economy may actually end up benefiting. New economic and philosophical research argues that policymakers must consider both the beneficial effects of climate change to "climate winners" as well as its costs in order to appropriately incentivize actions that are best for society and for the environment. The study by researchers from Princeton University, University College Cork, and HEC Montréal appears to be the first to develop a systematic, ethical framework for addressing climate winners -- as well as those harmed -- using financial transfers. Their approach, called "Polluter Pays, Then Receives," requires ...

Report: The Impact of the COIVD-19 pandemic on CUNY students

2021-03-03
A recent survey of the approximately 274,000 City University of New York (CUNY) students published in the Journal of Urban Health found that the Covid-19 pandemic has taken a toll on their mental health and financial security. The population-representative survey, conducted by a team of CUNY SPH faculty in collaboration with researchers at Healthy CUNY, found that more than half of CUNY students (54%) reported experiencing depression and/or anxiety in April 2020, at the height of the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic. Further, they found disturbingly high levels of financial instability and noted that food insecurity and housing worries were strong ...

Pericardial injection effective, less invasive way to get regenerative therapies to heart

2021-03-03
Injecting hydrogels containing stem cell or exosome therapeutics directly into the pericardial cavity could be a less invasive, less costly, and more effective means of treating cardiac injury, according to new research from North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Stem cell therapy holds promise as a way to treat cardiac injury, but delivering the therapy directly to the site of the injury and keeping it in place long enough to be effective are ongoing challenges. Even cardiac patches, which can be positioned directly over the site of the injury, have drawbacks in that they require invasive surgical ...

Mobile app helps young adults talk with friends about risky drug, alcohol use

Mobile app helps young adults talk with friends about risky drug, alcohol use
2021-03-03
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- A smartphone app called Harbor, currently under development by researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, teaches young adults how to talk to a peer if they are concerned about that other person's drinking or drug use. Designed for people ages 18-29, Harbor teaches young adults how they can "act as first responders for their close friends who demonstrate risky substance use behaviors," according to the app's lead developer, social work professor Douglas C. Smith. Smith, the director of the Center for Prevention Research and Development at the U. of I., focuses his ...

Current issue articles for Geosphere posted online in February

2021-03-03
Boulder, Colo., USA: GSA's dynamic online journal, Geosphere, posts articles online regularly. Topics for articles posted for Geosphere this month include "a tale of five enclaves"; evidence for mantle and Moho in the Baltimore Mafic Complex (Maryland, USA); and the after effects of the 1964 Mw 9.2 megathrust rupture, Alaska. From Ordovician nascent to early Permian mature arc in the southern Altaids: Insights from the Kalatage inlier in the Eastern Tianshan, NW China Qigui Mao; Jingbin Wang; Wenjiao Xiao; Brian F. Windley; Karel Schulmann ... Abstract: The Kalatage inlier in the Dananhu-Haerlik arc is one of the most important arcs in the Eastern Tianshan, southern Altaids ...

Researchers discover that privacy-preserving tools leave private data anything but

2021-03-03
BROOKLYN, New York, Wednesday, March 3, 2021 - Machine-learning (ML) systems are becoming pervasive not only in technologies affecting our day-to-day lives, but also in those observing them, including face expression recognition systems. Companies that make and use such widely deployed services rely on so-called privacy preservation tools that often use generative adversarial networks (GANs), typically produced by a third party to scrub images of individuals' identity. But how good are they? Researchers at the END ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Family Heart Foundation appoints Dr. Seth Baum as Chairman of the Board of Directors

New route to ‘quantum spin liquid’ materials discovered for first time

Chang’e-6 basalts offer insights on lunar farside volcanism

Chang’e-6 lunar samples reveal 2.83-billion-year-old basalt with depleted mantle source

Zinc deficiency promotes Acinetobacter lung infection: study

How optogenetics can put the brakes on epilepsy seizures

Children exposed to antiseizure meds during pregnancy face neurodevelopmental risks, Drexel study finds

Adding immunotherapy to neoadjuvant chemoradiation may improve outcomes in esophageal cancer

Scientists transform blood into regenerative materials, paving the way for personalized, blood-based, 3D-printed implants

Maarja Öpik to take up the position of New Phytologist Editor-in-Chief from January 2025

Mountain lions coexist with outdoor recreationists by taking the night shift

Students who use dating apps take more risks with their sexual health

Breakthrough idea for CCU technology commercialization from 'carbon cycle of the earth'

Keck Hospital of USC earns an ‘A’ Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group

Depression research pioneer Dr. Philip Gold maps disease's full-body impact

Rapid growth of global wildland-urban interface associated with wildfire risk, study shows

Generation of rat offspring from ovarian oocytes by Cross-species transplantation

Duke-NUS scientists develop novel plug-and-play test to evaluate T cell immunotherapy effectiveness

Compound metalens achieves distortion-free imaging with wide field of view

Age on the molecular level: showing changes through proteins

Label distribution similarity-based noise correction for crowdsourcing

The Lancet: Without immediate action nearly 260 million people in the USA predicted to have overweight or obesity by 2050

Diabetes medication may be effective in helping people drink less alcohol

US over 40s could live extra 5 years if they were all as active as top 25% of population

Limit hospital emissions by using short AI prompts - study

UT Health San Antonio ranks at the top 5% globally among universities for clinical medicine research

Fayetteville police positive about partnership with social workers

Optical biosensor rapidly detects monkeypox virus

New drug targets for Alzheimer’s identified from cerebrospinal fluid

Neuro-oncology experts reveal how to use AI to improve brain cancer diagnosis, monitoring, treatment

[Press-News.org] Researchers urge greater awareness of delayed skin reactions to Moderna COVID-19 vaccine
These reactions should not discourage patients from getting the vaccine, say researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital