Affiliation:
1. Drug Safety Monitoring Center National Medical Center Seoul South Korea
2. Department of Epidemiology and Health Informatics, Graduate School of Public Health, Korea University Seoul South Korea
3. Department of Preventive Medicine Korea University College of Medicine Seoul South Korea
Abstract
AbstractPurposeStudies on the detection of COVID‐19 vaccine signals in South Korea are insufficient. Therefore, to investigate adverse events (AEs) that might be associated with COVID‐19 vaccines, signals were detected using spontaneous reports from South Korea. We compared the signals with the vaccine insert lists of the regulators in the four countries.MethodsSpontaneous reports from 62 sites were collected by the National Medical Center between January 2013 and May 2022. A descriptive analysis of AEs associated with COVID‐19 vaccines (Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca, and Janssen) was performed, and the proportional reporting ratio, reporting odds ratio, and information component were calculated. We performed five analyses, with five cases and one control group.ResultsDuring the study period, 68 355 cases were reported, of which 12 485 were COVID‐19 vaccine AEs. Injection site pain (2198 cases, 17.6%), myalgia (1552 cases, 12.4%), headache (1145 cases, 9.2%), pyrexia (1003 cases, 8.0%), and fatigue (735 cases, 5.9%) were frequently reported. When comparing all COVID‐19 vaccines with other viral vaccines, 20 signals were detected, of which cachexia, dyspepsia, abdominal discomfort, and mood swings were not listed on the vaccine inserts in all four countries. Overall, 20, 17, 29, and 9 signals were detected in vaccines developed by Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca, and Janssen, respectively.ConclusionsBased on a disproportionate analysis of COVID‐19 vaccine AEs using spontaneous reports from South Korea, different signals were detected for each vaccine manufacturer.
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Epidemiology
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