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Short and Long-Term Safety of the 2009 AS03- Adjuvanted Pandemic Vaccine De Serres, Gaston; Gariépy, Marie-Claude; Coleman, Brenda; Rouleau, Isabelle; McNeil, Shelly; Benoît, Mélanie; McGeer, Allison; Ambrose, Ardith; Needham, Judy; Bergeron, Chantal; Grenier, Cynthia; Sleigh, Kenna Marie; Kallos, Arlene; Ouakki, Manale; Ouhoummane, Najwa; Stiver, Grant; Valiquette, Louis; McCarthy, Anne; Bettinger, Julie A.; PHAC-CIHR influenza Research Network (PCIRN)
Abstract
Background: This study assessed the short and the long term safety of the 2009 AS03 adjuvanted monovalent pandemic
vaccine through an active web-based electronic surveillance. We compared its safety profile to that of the seasonal trivalent
inactivated influenza vaccine (TIV) for 2010–2011.
Methodology/Principal Findings: Health care workers (HCW) vaccinated in 2009 with the pandemic vaccine (Arepanrix H
from GSK) or HCW vaccinated in 2010 with the 2010–2011 TIV were invited to participate in a web-based active surveillance
of vaccine safety. They completed two surveys the day-8 survey covered the first 7 days post-vaccination and the day-29
survey covered events occurring 8 to 28 days after vaccination. Those who reported a problem were called by a nurse to
obtain details. The main outcome was the occurrence of a new health problem or the worsening of an existing health
condition that resulted in a medical consultation or work absenteeism. For the pandemic vaccine, a six-month follow-up for
the occurrence of serious adverse events (SAE) was conducted. Among the 6242 HCW who received the pandemic vaccine,
440 (7%) reported 468 events compared to 328 of the 7645 HCW (4.3%) who reported 339 events after the seasonal vaccine.
The 2009 pandemic vaccine was associated with significantly more local reactions than the 2010–2011 seasonal vaccine (1%
vs. 0.03%, p,0.001). Paresthesia was reported by 7 HCW (0.1%) after the pandemic vaccine but by none after the seasonal
vaccine. For the pandemic vaccine, no clustering of SAE was found in the 6 month follow-up.
Conclusion: The 2009 pandemic vaccine seems to have a good safety profile, similar to the 2010–2011 TIV, with the
exception of local reactions. This surveillance was adequately powered to identify AE associated with an excess risk $1 per
1000 vaccinations but is insufficient to detect rare AE.
Item Metadata
| Title |
Short and Long-Term Safety of the 2009 AS03- Adjuvanted Pandemic Vaccine
|
| Creator |
De Serres, Gaston; Gariépy, Marie-Claude; Coleman, Brenda; Rouleau, Isabelle; McNeil, Shelly; Benoît, Mélanie; McGeer, Allison; Ambrose, Ardith; Needham, Judy; Bergeron, Chantal; Grenier, Cynthia; Sleigh, Kenna Marie; Kallos, Arlene; Ouakki, Manale; Ouhoummane, Najwa; Stiver, Grant; Valiquette, Louis; McCarthy, Anne; Bettinger, Julie A.; PHAC-CIHR influenza Research Network (PCIRN)
|
| Date Issued |
2012-07
|
| Description |
Background: This study assessed the short and the long term safety of the 2009 AS03 adjuvanted monovalent pandemic
vaccine through an active web-based electronic surveillance. We compared its safety profile to that of the seasonal trivalent
inactivated influenza vaccine (TIV) for 2010–2011.
Methodology/Principal Findings: Health care workers (HCW) vaccinated in 2009 with the pandemic vaccine (Arepanrix H
from GSK) or HCW vaccinated in 2010 with the 2010–2011 TIV were invited to participate in a web-based active surveillance
of vaccine safety. They completed two surveys the day-8 survey covered the first 7 days post-vaccination and the day-29
survey covered events occurring 8 to 28 days after vaccination. Those who reported a problem were called by a nurse to
obtain details. The main outcome was the occurrence of a new health problem or the worsening of an existing health
condition that resulted in a medical consultation or work absenteeism. For the pandemic vaccine, a six-month follow-up for
the occurrence of serious adverse events (SAE) was conducted. Among the 6242 HCW who received the pandemic vaccine,
440 (7%) reported 468 events compared to 328 of the 7645 HCW (4.3%) who reported 339 events after the seasonal vaccine.
The 2009 pandemic vaccine was associated with significantly more local reactions than the 2010–2011 seasonal vaccine (1%
vs. 0.03%, p,0.001). Paresthesia was reported by 7 HCW (0.1%) after the pandemic vaccine but by none after the seasonal
vaccine. For the pandemic vaccine, no clustering of SAE was found in the 6 month follow-up.
Conclusion: The 2009 pandemic vaccine seems to have a good safety profile, similar to the 2010–2011 TIV, with the
exception of local reactions. This surveillance was adequately powered to identify AE associated with an excess risk $1 per
1000 vaccinations but is insufficient to detect rare AE.
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| Genre | |
| Type | |
| Language |
eng
|
| Date Available |
2016-03-09
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| Provider |
Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library
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| Rights |
Attribution 2.5 Canada
|
| DOI |
10.14288/1.0228095
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| URI | |
| Affiliation | |
| Citation |
De Serres, G., Gariépy, M., Coleman, B., Rouleau, I., McNeil, S., Benoît, M., . . . Bettinger, J. (2012). Short and long-term safety of the 2009 AS03-adjuvanted pandemic vaccine. PloS One, 7(7), e38563.
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| Publisher DOI |
10.1371/journal.pone.0038563
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| Peer Review Status |
Reviewed
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| Scholarly Level |
Faculty
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| Rights URI | |
| Aggregated Source Repository |
DSpace
|
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Rights
Attribution 2.5 Canada