Study protocol: cohort event monitoring for safety signal detection after vaccination with COVID-19 vaccines in Iran

Author:

Aliyari Roqayeh,Mahdavi Sepideh,Enayatrad Mostafa,Sahab-Negah Sajad,Nili Sairan,Fereidooni Mohammad,Mangolian shahrbabaki Parvin,Ansari-Moghaddam Alireza,Heidarzadeh Abtin,Shahraki-Sanavi Fariba,Amini Moridani Mohammadreza,Fateh Mansooreh,Khajeha Hamidreza,Emamian Zahra,Behmanesh Elahe,Sharifi Hamid,Emamian Mohammad HassanORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background New vaccines that are initially approved in clinical trials are not completely free of risks. Systematic vaccine safety surveillance is required for ensuring safety of vaccines. This study aimed to provide a protocol for safety monitoring of COVID-19 vaccines, including Sputnik V, Sinopharm (BBIBP-CorV), COVIran Barekat, and AZD1222. Methods This is a prospective cohort study in accordance with a template provided by the World Health Organization. The target population includes citizens of seven cities in Iran who have received one of the available COVID-19 vaccines according to the national instruction on vaccination. The participants are followed for three months after they receive the second dose of the vaccine. For each type of vaccine, 30,000 people will be enrolled in the study of whom the first 1,000 participants are in the reactogenicity subgroup. The reactogenicity outcomes will be followed seven days after vaccination. Any hospitalization, COVID-19 disease, or other minor outcomes will be investigated in weekly follow-ups. The data are gathered through self-reporting of participants in a mobile application or phone calls to them. The study outcomes may be investigated for the third and fourth doses of vaccines. Other long-term outcomes may also be investigated after the expansion of the follow-up period. We have planned to complete data collection for the current objectives by the end 2022. Discussion The results of this study will be published in different articles. A live dashboard is also available for managers and policymakers. All data will be available on reasonable requests from the corresponding author.The use of the good and comprehensive guidelines provided by WHO, along with the accurate implementation of the protocol and continuous monitoring of the staff performance are the main strengths of this study which may be very useful for policymaking about COVID-19 vaccination.

Funder

World Health Organization

Shahroud University of Medical Sciences

Vice-Chancellor for Research, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference13 articles.

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