Vaccines (Jul 2022)

Incidence and Characteristics of Adverse Events after COVID-19 Vaccination in a Population-Based Programme

  • Laura Bonzano,
  • Olivera Djuric,
  • Pamela Mancuso,
  • Lidia Fares,
  • Raffaele Brancaccio,
  • Marta Ottone,
  • Eufemia Bisaccia,
  • Massimo Vicentini,
  • Alessia Cocconcelli,
  • Alfonso Motolese,
  • Rostyslav Boyko,
  • Paolo Giorgi Rossi,
  • Alberico Motolese

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10071111
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
p. 1111

Abstract

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Compliance with vaccination is linked to its safety. In Italy, a plan to identify people who could be at an increased risk of adverse events (AEs) was defined so they could be vaccinated in a protected setting. We conducted an audit to describe the process of AE risk assessment and occurrence in the Reggio Emilia Province in Italy in people who received any of the four COVID-19 vaccines currently used in Italy. Incidence of AEs was calculated by dose and type of vaccine and type of setting (standard vs. protected). After 182,056 first doses were administered, 521 (0.3%) AEs were reported. Most of the AEs were non-serious (91.4%) and non-allergic (92.7%). The percentage of AEs was similar in both settings: 0.3% in the standard setting and 0.2% in the protected setting. However, the incidence of AEs was higher among those who had an allergist visit than among those who did not (IR 666.7 vs. 124.9). All deaths (1.6/100.000) occurred in standard settings and after the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. The incidence of AEs was lower after the second dose (IR 286.2 vs. 190.3), except for mRNA vaccines, for which it was higher after the second dose (IR 169.8 vs. 251.8). Although vaccination in a protected medical setting could reassure patients with a history of allergies to be vaccinated, allergy history and other anamnestic information is not useful in predicting the risk of COVID-19 vaccine-related AEs in the general population.

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