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Characterization and analysis of neurologic adverse events associated with COVID-19 vaccination (S12.006)


Citation

Boruah, Abhilasha and Westenberg, Erica and Khan, Abdul Hanif and Fan, Kee Hoo and Guekht, Alla and Spatola, Marianna and Calandri, Ismael and Netravathi, M and Wijeratne, Tissa and Warburton, Elyce and Doheim, Mohamed Fahmy and Pulickal, Carolin and Chen, Jakin and Thakur, Kiran and Mulchan, Nicholas and Ssonko, Vivian and Tetreault, Lindsay and Sejvar, Jim and Faissner, Simon and James, Jeyanthan Charles and Hunter, Jessica and Garcia-Azorin, David and Tamborska, Arina and Bresjanac, Maja and Delgado-Garcia, Guillermo and Singh, Nina and Baykan, Betül and Gezegen, Hasim and Kyei-Frimpong, Nana and Winkler, Andrea and Frontera, Jennifer (2022) Characterization and analysis of neurologic adverse events associated with COVID-19 vaccination (S12.006). Neurology, 98 (18). art. no. suppl. 3784. ISSN 0028-3878; ESSN: 1526-632X

Abstract

Objective: To characterize the incidence and spectrum of neurological adverse events (AE) after COVID-19 vaccination. Background: The devastating COVID-19 pandemic has led to 230 million people diagnosed and greater than 4.8 million deaths worldwide. Widespread vaccination efforts have resulted in administration of over 6 million vaccine doses to curb the significant health and socioeconomic impacts of the disease. While there are numerous reports of adverse events following COVID-19 vaccine, there is limited characterization of the spectrum of neurological AEs post-vaccination. Design/Methods: Data was gathered from the publicly available Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), a passive reporting system not implying causality. Among individuals who received the J&J, Moderna, and Pfizer vaccines from 1/1/2021–6/14/2021, 314,610 adverse events were reported and these were reviewed by Neurology trained clinicians to determine the presence of various neurological AEs (40 conditions coded). Results: 306,473,169 COVID vaccine dose were administered in the USA during the study period with 314,610 total AEs (0.10%) and 105,930 neurological AEs (0.03%) reported. J&J vaccine was associated with the most AEs (17,670, 0.15%), followed by Moderna (42656, 0.03%) and Pfizer (42267, 0.03%). On average more events were reported in women (71%) and a majority occurred after the first dose (54%). < 1 events were reported per million vaccine doses for serious neurological conditions such as Bell’s palsy (0.0007%), Guillain-Barre syndrome (0.00009%), cerebral venous thrombosis (0.00005%), transverse myelitis (0.00003%), and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (0.00006%). Overall neurological complications following vaccine were drastically lower than complications post-COVID infection (14–80%). Conclusions: Adverse neurological events following COVID-19 vaccination are extremely rare and significantly less common than adverse neurological effects following SARS-CoV-2 infection. Current evidence suggests that along with being up to 100,000 times more likely to experience a major complication from COVID infection vs. vaccine, the risk of neurological complication is up to 5000 times more likely from infection itself.


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Additional Metadata

Item Type: Article
Divisions: Faculty of Medicine and Health Science
Publisher: Wolters Kluwer Health
Keywords: Neurological; Adverse events (AE); COVID-19; Vaccine
Depositing User: Ms. Nur Faseha Mohd Kadim
Date Deposited: 15 Sep 2023 08:41
Last Modified: 15 Sep 2023 08:41
URI: http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/100671
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