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Influence of mRNA Covid-19 vaccine dosing interval on the risk of myocarditis.

Stéphane Le VuMarion BertrandLaura SemenzatoMarie Joelle JabagiJérémie BottonJérôme DrouinAlain WeillRosemary Dray-SpiraMahmoud Zureik
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Myocarditis is the most salient serious adverse event following messenger RNA-based Covid-19 vaccines. The highest risk is observed after the second dose compared to the first, whereas the level of risk associated with more distant booster doses seems to lie in between. We aimed to assess the relation between dosing interval and the risk of myocarditis, for both the two-dose primary series and the third dose (first booster). This matched case-control study included 7911 cases of myocarditis aged 12 or more in a period where approximately 130 million vaccine doses were administered. Here we show that longer intervals between each consecutive dose, including booster, may decrease the occurrence of vaccine-associated myocarditis by up to a factor of 4, especially under age 50. These results suggest that a minimum 6-month interval might be required when scheduling additional booster vaccination.
Keyphrases
  • coronavirus disease
  • sars cov
  • risk assessment
  • lymph node
  • drug induced