Thromboembolic Events after COVID-19 Vaccination: An Italian Retrospective Real-World Safety Study

Author:

Bernardi Francesca Futura1,Mascolo Annamaria23,Sarno Marina4,Capoluongo Nicolina4,Trama Ugo1,Ruggiero Rosanna23,Sportiello Liberata23,Fusco Giovanni Maria1,Bisogno Massimo5,Coscioni Enrico6,Iervolino Anna7,Di Micco Pierpaolo8ORCID,Capuano Annalisa23,Perrella Alessandro49ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Directorate-General for Health Protection, Campania Region, 80143 Naples, Italy

2. Campania Regional Centre for Pharmacovigilance and Pharmacoepidemiology, 80138 Naples, Italy

3. Department of Experimental Medicine, Section of Pharmacology “L. Donatelli”, University of Campania “Luigi Vanvitelli”, Via Costantinopoli 16, 80138 Naples, Italy

4. Unit Emerging Infectious Disease, Ospedali dei Colli, P.O. D. Cotugno, 80131 Naples, Italy

5. Regional Special Office for Digital Transformation, Campania Region, 80100 Naples, Italy

6. Division of Cardiac Surgery, AOU San Giovanni di Dio e Ruggi d’Aragona, 84131 Salerno, Italy

7. Directorate-General AORN Ospedali dei Colli, Campania Region, 80131 Naples, Italy

8. General Medicine, Santa Maria delle Grazie Hospital, ASL NA2 Nord, 80078 Pozzuoli, Italy

9. Regional Observatory for Infectious Disease, Campania Region, 80131 Naples, Italy

Abstract

Introduction: Real-world safety studies can provide important evidence on the thromboembolic risk associated with COVID-19 vaccines, considering that millions of people have been already vaccinated against COVID-19. In this study, we aimed to estimate the incidence of thromboembolic events after COVID-19 vaccination and to compare the Oxford–AstraZeneca vaccine with other COVID-19 vaccines. Methods: We conducted a retrospective real-world safety study using data from two different data sources: the Italian Pharmacovigilance database (Rete Nazionale di Farmacovigilanza, RNF) and the Campania Region Health system (Sistema INFOrmativo saNità CampanIA, SINFONIA). From the start date of the COVID-19 vaccination campaign (27 December 2021) to 27 September 2022, information on COVID-19 vaccinations and thromboembolic events were extracted from the two databases. The reporting rate (RR) and its 95% confidence interval (95%CI) of thromboembolic events for 10,000 doses was calculated for each COVID-19 vaccine. Moreover, the odds of being vaccinated with the Oxford–AstraZeneca vaccine vs. the other COVID-19 vaccines in cases with thromboembolic events vs. controls without thromboembolic events were computed. Results: A total of 12,692,852 vaccine doses were administered in the Campania Region, of which 6,509,475 (51.28%) were in females and mostly related to the Pfizer-BioNtech vaccine (65.05%), followed by Moderna (24.31%), Oxford–AstraZeneca (9.71%), Janssen (0.91%), and Novavax (0.02%) vaccines. A total of 641 ICSRs with COVID-19 vaccines and vascular events were retrieved from the RNF for the Campania Region, of which 453 (70.67%) were in females. Most ICSRs reported the Pfizer-BioNtech vaccine (65.05%), followed by Oxford–AstraZeneca (9.71%), Moderna (24.31%), and Janssen (0.91%). A total of 2451 events were reported in the ICSRs (3.8 events for ICSRs), of which 292 were thromboembolic events. The higher RRs of thromboembolic events were found with the Oxford–AstraZeneca vaccine (RR: 4.62, 95%CI: 3.50–5.99) and Janssen vaccine (RR: 3.45, 95%CI: 0.94–8.82). Thromboembolic events were associated with a higher likelihood of exposure to the Oxford–AstraZeneca vaccine compared to Pfizer-BioNtech (OR: 6.06; 95%CI: 4.22–8.68) and Moderna vaccines (OR: 6.46; 95%CI: 4.00–10.80). Conclusion: We observed a higher reporting of thromboembolic events with viral-vector-based vaccines (Oxford–AstraZeneca and Janssen) and an increased likelihood of being exposed to the Oxford–AstraZeneca vaccine compared to the mRNA vaccines (Pfizer-BioNtech and Moderna) among thromboembolic cases.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Drug Discovery,Pharmacology,Immunology

Reference33 articles.

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5. EMA (2023, January 12). COVID-19 Safety Update Vaxzevria Vaccine—14 April 2021. Available online: https://www.ema.europa.eu/en/documents/covid-19-vaccine-safety-update/covid-19-vaccine-safety-update-vaxzevria-previously-covid-19-vaccine-astrazeneca-14-april-2021_en.pdf.

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