Risk of incident gout following exposure to recombinant zoster vaccine in US adults aged ≥50 years.

View Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To assess whether recombinant zoster vaccine (RZV) is associated with an increased risk of new-onset gout among US adults aged ≥50 years.

METHODS

We conducted a real-world, retrospective safety study with a self-controlled risk interval (SCRI) design using administrative claims data. We included health plan members aged ≥50 years with RZV exposure, followed by incident gout within 60 days. Days 1-30 following RZV exposure were considered the risk window (RW), and days 31-60 were considered the control window (CW). We estimated the risk ratio (RR) of gout in the RW versus CW, using a conditional Poisson model. The primary analysis estimated the risk of incident gout following any RZV dose. Sensitivity analyses evaluated dose 1- and dose 2-specific risks, risk among patients compliant with recommended dose spacing of 60-183 days, adjustment for seasonality, and restriction to the pre-COVID-19 era (before December 1, 2019).

RESULTS

A total of 461,323 individuals received ≥1 RZV dose; we included 302 individuals (mean age 72.5 years; 66 % male) with evidence of new-onset gout within 60 days in SCRI analyses. A total of 153 (50.7 %) individuals had gout events in the RW and 149 (49.3 %) in the CW (RR 1.03; 95 % confidence interval 0.81, 1.29). All sensitivity analyses had consistent results, with no association of RZV with incident gout.

CONCLUSION

In a population of US adults aged ≥50 years, there was no statistically significant increase in the risk of gout during the 30 days immediately after RZV exposure, compared with a subsequent 30-day CW.

Abbreviation
Semin Arthritis Rheum
Publication Date
2024-07-14
Volume
68
Page Numbers
152518
Pubmed ID
39079205
Medium
Print-Electronic
Full Title
Risk of incident gout following exposure to recombinant zoster vaccine in US adults aged ≥50 years.
Authors
Kluberg SA, Simon AL, Alam SM, Peters A, Horgan C, Li D, Moyneur E, Messenger-Jones E, Platt R, McMahill-Walraven CN, Djibo DA, Daniels K, Jamal-Allial A, Pernar CH, Ziyadeh NJ, Ma Q, Selvan M, Spence O, Oraichi D, Seifert H, Franck V, Gamble S, Yun H