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. 2021 Aug 16;73(4):e927-e933.
doi: 10.1093/cid/ciab059.

Evaluation of Vaccine Safety After the First Public Sector Introduction of Typhoid Conjugate Vaccine-Navi Mumbai, India, 2018

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Evaluation of Vaccine Safety After the First Public Sector Introduction of Typhoid Conjugate Vaccine-Navi Mumbai, India, 2018

Ashley T Longley et al. Clin Infect Dis. .

Abstract

Background: In December 2017, the World Health Organization (WHO) prequalified the first typhoid conjugate vaccine (TCV; Typbar-TCV). While no safety concerns were identified in pre- and postlicensure studies, WHO's Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety recommended robust safety evaluation with large-scale TCV introductions. During July-August 2018, the Navi Mumbai Municipal Corporation (NMMC) launched the world's first public sector TCV introduction. Per administrative reports, 113 420 children 9 months-14 years old received TCV.

Methods: We evaluated adverse events following immunization (AEFIs) using passive and active surveillance via (1) reports from the passive NMMC AEFI surveillance system, (2) telephone interviews with 5% of caregivers of vaccine recipients 48 hours and 7 days postvaccination, and (3) chart abstraction for adverse events of special interest (AESIs) among patients admitted to 5 hospitals using the Brighton Collaboration criteria followed by ascertainment of vaccination status.

Results: We identified 222/113 420 (0.2%) vaccine recipients with AEFIs through the NMMC AEFI surveillance system: 211 (0.19%) experienced minor AEFIs, 2 (0.002%) severe, and 9 serious (0.008%). At 48 hours postvaccination, 1852/5605 (33%) caregivers reported ≥1 AEFI, including injection site pain (n = 1452, 26%), swelling (n = 419, 7.5%), and fever (n = 416, 7.4%). Of the 4728 interviews completed at 7 days postvaccination, the most reported AEFIs included fever (n = 200, 4%), pain (n = 52, 1%), and headache (n = 42, 1%). Among 525 hospitalized children diagnosed with an AESI, 60 were vaccinated; no AESIs were causally associated with TCV.

Conclusions: No unexpected safety signals were identified with TCV introduction. This provides further reassurance for the large-scale use of Typbar-TCV among children 9 months-14 years old.

Keywords: adverse events following immunization; adverse events of special interest; typhoid conjugate vaccine; typhoid vaccination campaign.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Most common safety-related events by assessment method among individuals who were reported to have received TCV1—Navi Mumbai, India, 2018. 1Typbar-TCV, Bharat Biotech International Limited, India. 2Per administrative reports. 3A total of 2023 children experienced at least 1 AEFI at either time point (48 hours or 7 days following TCV vaccination). At 7 days following vaccination, 172 of 343 children had reported an AEFI at 48 hours as well. 4Telephone interviews were conducted among 5605 caregivers of TCV recipients at 48 hours after vaccination. At 7 days following TCV vaccination, 4728 of those caregivers were interviewed again. 5Fever was the only AEFI reported among more than 1% of vaccine recipients 7 days following vaccination. Abbreviations: AEFI, adverse events following immunization; TCV, typhoid conjugate vaccine.

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