Cancer patient awareness and willingness to take COVID-19 Vaccination: An Indian survey
PO-1454
Abstract
Cancer patient awareness and willingness to take COVID-19 Vaccination: An Indian survey
Authors: Vivek Ghosh1, Vibhay Pareek2, Mansi Barthwal2, Gopikrishna Shyam1, Adila A1, Devangana Bora1, Sushant Nirala1, Aswin Ravi1, Soham Sanyal1, Danda Vamsi Sai Praveen1, Sudatta Mandal1, Jhansi Pattanaik1, Sai Kumar Samala1, Suyash Pandey1, Manvendra Singh Tanwar1, Rahul Sisodiya1, Ajit Priy Solanky1, Haresh K.P.1, Subhash Gupta1, Rambha Pandey1, Surendra Kumar Saini1, Daya Nand Sharma1
1IRCH, AIIMS, Radiation Oncology, New Delhi, India; 2National Cancer Institute, AIIMS, Radiation Oncology, New Delhi, India
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Purpose or Objective
The resources regarding the vaccination for
COVID-19 among the cancer patients is not well-defined. The ill-understood
aspects of vaccination and its association with reduced immunity among the
cancer patients has led to lower general vaccine uptake rates among cancer
patients than in their healthy counterparts. In this study, we aimed to
investigate the attitude and acceptance rates for the COVID-19 vaccine in
cancer patients and identify predictive factors for vaccination that could be
modified to increase vaccine uptake rates, via a paper-based survey.
Material and Methods
A total of 275 cancer patients, who attended the
outpatient department in our institute, participated in this survey between January
2021 and June 2021. A paper-based survey was used to evaluate the awareness and
acceptance for the COVID-19 vaccination among the cancer patients which included
9 questions. To assess COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy rates,
participants were dichotomized into a vaccine-acceptant group and a
vaccine-hesitant group (prefer to wait, only if vaccine is mandatory, or
refuse). Respondents who previously had been vaccinated against COVID-19 were
excluded from the statistical analysis. Significance was defined as
2-tailed P < .05.
Results
Out of the 275 surveys undertaken, 252 surveys
were evaluated for final analysis. The acceptance rate was 67.8% among patients.
Positive predictive factors found to be independently associated with
vaccination were male gender, age more than 60 years, previous vaccination
history, no deceased family member due to COVID-19 and more than 2 years since
cancer treatment completion. Other factors found to impact the acceptance for
the vaccination included the current stable health status. On counselling after
understanding the awareness, there was a 21% conversion among the patients for
acceptance of the vaccination. About 54.8% participants had discussed regarding
the vaccine with their treating physicians. It was found that 66.7% of the patients considered themselves more
vulnerable to COVID-19 than the general population. The major concern for vaccine
refusal was the ongoing treatment and belief of adverse outcomes of vaccine on
cancer and misconception of contraindication of vaccine in cancer.
Conclusion
We present our data on the awareness and
acceptance for the COVI-19 vaccination among the Indian cancer patients. The
treating oncologists should play a major role in aiding cancer patients'
decision-making concerning COVID-19 vaccines and thereby aid in making informed
choice for the same. The misconception regarding COVID-19 vaccine and
cancer needs to be addressed for better vaccination coverage.