Phyumar Soe , Otto G. Vanderkooi , Manish Sadarangani , Monika Naus , Matthew P. Muller , James D. Kellner , Karina A. Top , Hubert Wong , Jennifer E. Isenor , Kimberly Marty , Hennady P. Shulha , Gaston De Serres , Louis Valiquette , Allison McGeer , Julie A. Bettinger
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
The Canadian National Vaccine Safety Network conducted active safety surveillance for COVID-19 vaccines. This study aimed to characterize the short-to-medium term safety of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines across the pediatric age spectrum.
Methods
In this cohort study, vaccinated and unvaccinated children and adolescents aged 6 months to 19 years from eight Canadian provinces and territories were invited to participate. The outcome was a health event preventing daily activities, resulting in school absenteeism, or requiring medical consultation. Age-stratified multivariable regression models were used to examine health events associated with first and second doses of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines across different age groups: children under 5, children aged 5–11 years and adolescents aged 12–19 years.
Findings
From January 2021 through February 2023, a total of 259,361 individuals from the dose one survey, 131,032 from the dose 2 survey, and 1179 from the control survey were included. In the week following dose two, vaccinated adolescents showed a higher proportion of health events [794 (4.6%) of 17,218 BNT162b2 recipients, 98 (8.5%) of 1153 mRNA-1273 recipients, 49 of (10.6%) of 464 heterologous schedule recipients] than unvaccinated adolescents [9 (3.7%) of 242 controls], but most events were self-limited and resolved within 7 days. No significant differences in proportion of health events following mRNA COVID-19 vaccines were observed between vaccinated and unvaccinated groups among adolescents after dose 1, or among children under 5 or those aged 5–11 years after any dose. Reported myocarditis/pericarditis cases within 0–28 days peaked among male adolescents following dose 2, in three of (0.037%) 8088 homologous BNT162b2 recipients, and two of (0.529%) 378 homologous mRNA-1273 recipients.
Interpretation
Our findings suggest that reported health events, including myocarditis/pericarditis, vary by pediatric age group. Vaccinated adolescents reported health events more frequently following the second mRNA COVID-19 vaccine dose, while younger age groups did not report events more frequently than their unvaccinated counterparts.
Funding
Canadian Immunization Research Network, Canadian Institutes of Health Research; Public Health Agency of Canada; COVID-19 Immunity Task Force.
期刊介绍:
The Lancet Regional Health – Americas, an open-access journal, contributes to The Lancet's global initiative by focusing on health-care quality and access in the Americas. It aims to advance clinical practice and health policy in the region, promoting better health outcomes. The journal publishes high-quality original research advocating change or shedding light on clinical practice and health policy. It welcomes submissions on various regional health topics, including infectious diseases, non-communicable diseases, child and adolescent health, maternal and reproductive health, emergency care, health policy, and health equity.