Tuesday, March 7, 2017

ITP and the Flu' Jab


In the December 2016 issue of the ITP Support Associations quarterly newsletter The Platelet, there were a couple of items about ITP and the flu's jab. Some ITPees say that their platelet counts dropped after the jab, though everyone's experience is different. In response, I thought I'd share my experiences with the flu' vaccine, and viral infections more generally. This is the gist of what I said, published in the March 2017 issue (pictured right):

At the time of my ITP diagnosis in summer 2012, I was already taking immunosuppressants, being 20+ years on from a liver transplant . As recommended by the transplant team, I’d had the flu' jab annually. After I had the jab in October 2012,  about three months after my ITP diagnosis , my platelet count dived from 167 to 12 in a fortnight.  I don't know whether this was the jab, or the change in my immunosuppressants around the same time(see below), or a combination of both. Either way, this experience made me very wary of having the flu' jab, and very nervous of catching infections generally for the next couple of years . With common coughs and colds,  my worries were  unfounded –  the usual agro of blocked nose, sore throat etc, but no big drops in my platelet count.

About six weeks after my ITP diagnosis, I began taking mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), in addition to the immunosuppressants prescribed by the transplant team ( tacrolimus (Prograf) and a 5mg daily maintenance dose of prednisolone). Two months on from my  diagnosis and about three weeks before my flu’ jab,  I was advised (by a member of the transplant team) to stop the tacrolimus. They reintroduced this gradually over the next two months, due to renewed liver problems (rejection) provoked by its withdrawal. I then continued to take MMF and 5mg prednisolone daily. This combination of immunosuppressants has kept  the liver problems in check and  my platelet count has been stable for the past four-and-a-half years  (usually 150-165). The main issue has been, unsurprisingly given all my immunosuppression, lower than normal white blood cell (neutrophil counts), putting me at increased risk of infection.


After three years of platelet stability I had the jab in 2015 and 2016 with no problems. After a  particularly vicious, feverish cold  in February 2016 I made my mind up firmly to have the jab from then on. That cold developed into a chest infection and I generally felt very unwell.  A blood test  a few days after this developed (at the transplant clinic) showed my platelets dropped from 160 to 114. More seriously, my white cell count was low, my neutrophils only 0.5, putting me at increased risk of complications from the infection. They advised me to stop my MMF for a few days and get another blood test done. When I did, it showed my white cells had returned to normal (neutrophils 2.8). I could then restart my MMF, though on a lower dose than before (reduced for 1g bd to 500mg bd). Thankfully my platelet count has held up on this lower MMF dose (and with two more colds during 2016), though I've still had some lower than normal white cell (neutrophil) counts.