Monday, September 11, 2023

5999 - Why it's better for sequential vaccinations to be given in the same arm.


Here's an interesting article about getting a follow-up shot. I'd never heard this before but it's not new. There are other articles about this on the net going back a few years. Think about this when getting your next COVID-19 vaccination.

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'The question seems so banal, so trivial that nobody before has thought to ask it, says Professor Martina Sester at the start of our conversation about the work of her doctoral student Laura Ziegler. What might at first sound like a bit of a put down is anything but – and it soon becomes clear that Sester values the fact that her doctoral student took the time to address this easily overlooked question. Scientists like Martina Sester, Professor of Transplant and Infection Immunology at Saarland University, and Laura Ziegler, who are interested in examining the effectiveness of vaccinations and vaccines, are far more likely to ask questions like: How does the vaccine move through the body? Does it travel directly or indirectly to the target site, and does it do any damage to normal body cells on the way? Is this vaccine more effective than that one, and which has the longer immune response? But so far no one has addressed the simple question of whether it's better for a doctor to give sequential vaccination shots in the same arm or to deliver one in the left arm and one in the right.

That may now be about to change. 'Our study indicates that ipsilateral vaccinations generate a stronger immune response than contralateral vaccinations,' explains Laura Ziegler. In an ipsilateral vaccination, the vaccine is injected twice into the same arm. In a contralateral vaccination, the primary vaccination is delivered to the left arm while the booster is injected into the right arm, or vice versa. Germany’s COVID-19 vaccination campaign provided an ideal setting in which to study this question. Laura Ziegler and Martina Sester were able to create a reliable dataset of 303 individuals who received the mRNA vaccine from Biontech as their primary and booster shots at the start of Germany's COVID-19 vaccination campaign.

The most striking result was that two weeks after the booster shot the number of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells, often referred to as 'killer T cells', was significantly higher in those individuals who had been injected in the same arm. 'In the ipsilateral (same arm) subjects, we were able to detect the killer T cells in 67 percent of cases. In contrast, we detected CD8+ T cells in only 43 percent of the contralaterally (opposite arm) vaccinated subjects,' explains Laura Ziegler. That may suggest that ipsilateral vaccination is more likely to provide better protection should the vaccinated person become infected with the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

'The number of antibodies, however, was not greater,' says Martina Sester. Unlike the killer cells, the antibodies do not immediately destroy the virus. Instead, they dock onto the virus preventing it from causing further harm or making it easier for macrophages to find the virus and then engulf and degrade it. 'What's interesting is that the antibodies in the ipsilaterally vaccinated subjects were better at binding to the viral spike protein,' explains Sester. So the antibodies in those persons who were vaccinated in the same arm were better at doing their job than the antibodies in the contralateral subjects, who were given injections in both arms.

So far there have been hardly any studies looking into the significance of where primary and booster vaccination shots are applied. 'As dramatic as the pandemic was, it has provided us with reliable data that enables us to address questions of this kind,' explains Professor Sester.

At the early stage of the vaccination campaign, there were a very large number of volunteers who had not had any contact with the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Had their immune systems already been in contact with the pathogen, this would have affected the results of the study. As it was, all 303 immune systems had identical starting conditions with respect to COVID-19. For medical scientists like Laura Ziegler and her supervisor Professor Martina Sester, the pandemic provided a unique opportunity to examine questions about immune response mechanisms.

As Laura Ziegler only analyzed data from individuals who had received two shots of the Biontech SARS-CoV-2 vaccine, the 23-year-old researcher is suitably cautious about generalizing the conclusions of her study. Further work is required before we know whether the study has implications for other sequential vaccinations, such as flu vaccinations or vaccinations against tropical diseases. But it does seem possible that some vaccinations will generate a stronger immune response if the injections are delivered into the same arm – making the apparently naive question posed at the beginning of the study suddenly seem not quite so banal after all.

15 comments:

Elephant's Child said...

How interesting.
I definitely have a 'preferred arm' for injections so accidentally may have done myself a favour.

Ami said...

Interesting. Hadn't heard of that or even thought about it. I have been nervous about vaccine reactions ever since my last tetanus shot (it was 1969) made my arm swell up so much that the skin actually split. So I always request any shots I need to be in my left (non-dominant) side. Just in case.

Mike said...

Sue - Like I said there are lots of articles on this. One of them mentioned the lymphatic system and how fast the concentrated injection got to a lymphatic node that had been the primary reception node the first time.

Ami - I have a cousin who swears a flu shot gave her the flu so she has never gotten another one. It's been proven that generally the more shots you've had over your lifetime the more immune you are.

River said...

I've had them in either arm and it doesn't seem to have made any difference but I already have an excellent immune system. I might remember this for my next booster though and go for the left arm.

Ole phat Stu said...

My arm swelled from the first jab so my doc did the 2nd shot in the other arm without asking me what I wanted.

Mike said...

River - I talked to the pharmacist at Walgreens about this. She said unless someone asks for the right arm they assume you're right-handed and inject the left arm.

Stu - So we have another arm sweller here. I don't know anyone who has had that problem. Now I know 2!

Bilbo said...

I've never heard this before, but since the article has a lot of scientific-looking letters and numbers in it, I guess it must be right. I generally don't react to injections (except yellow fever years ago, which just made me want to curl up and die); I just prefer the left arm since I'm right-handed.

Kathy G said...

Because I'm left handed I always ask for the right arm.

Debra She Who Seeks said...

Yeah, I heard this on the news not too long ago.

John A Hill said...

Interesting
I generally opt for a right arm injection since I tend to sleep on my left side. It just makes it easier for the night after the injection.

Mike said...

Bill - The only time I've reacted to shots was in basic training where I got six shots all at once (with the guns). I just about went down but managed to stagger out.

Kathy - Arm consistency seems to be the correct thing to do.

Deb - I can't remember where I saw this first. But it was all new to me.

John - Stay with that.

Rawknrobyn.blogspot.com said...

A friend of mine just got the flu and a COVID vaccination in same arm. She regrets it because that arm hurt for so long afterwards.
Regardless, I prefer no needles at all. Sigh.

Margaret (Peggy or Peg too) said...

Come to think of it I've had all my vaccines in my left arm. Covid/Boosters, shingles, pneumonia, flu etc.
Interesting again Mr. Mike

Cloudia said...

See I'm fascinated by stuff like this. Thank you, Mike

Mike said...

Robyn- My last round of covid/flu was left arm covid right arm flu. I probably will start staying with the left arm and just space them out for a week or two.

Peg - You're a step ahead of me.

Cloudia - Me too! 😁