BMJ Medicine (Sep 2024)

Association between maternal mRNA covid-19 vaccination in early pregnancy and major congenital anomalies in offspring: population based cohort study with sibling matched analysis

  • Peter C Austin,
  • Deshayne B Fell,
  • Kumanan Wilson,
  • Astrid Guttmann,
  • Jeffrey C Kwong,
  • Sarah A Buchan,
  • Mina Tadrous,
  • Sarah C J Jorgensen,
  • Rohan D'Souza,
  • Sarah E Wilson,
  • Kevin L Schwartz,
  • Sharifa Nasreen,
  • Kevin A Brown,
  • Linda Gough,
  • Samantha S M Drover

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjmed-2023-000743
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1

Abstract

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Objective To examine the association between maternal mRNA covid-19 vaccination during the first trimester of pregnancy and the prevalence of major congenital anomalies in offspring.Design Population based cohort study with sibling matched analysis.Setting Multiple health administrative databases, linked and analysed at ICES, an independent, non-profit research institute that collects and analyses healthcare and demographic data, Ontario, Canada, from 16 October 2021 to 1 May 2023.Population 174 296 singleton live births >20 weeks' gestation with an expected birth date between 16 October 2021 and 1 May 2023: 34 181 (20%) born to mothers who received one or two doses of an mRNA covid-19 vaccine in the first trimester and 34 951 (20%) born to mothers who did not receive a vaccine before or during pregnancy. The sibling matched analysis included 13 312 infants exposed to a covid-19 vaccine in the first trimester and 15 089 matched older siblings with the same mother, with an expected birth date after 16 October 2016 and no reported in utero exposure to a covid-19 vaccine.Main outcome measures Major congenital anomalies, overall and grouped by specific organ systems, diagnosed within 28 days of birth.Results Major congenital anomalies were present in 832 (24.3 per 1000 live births) infants exposed to an mRNA covid-19 vaccine in the first trimester compared with 927 (26.5 per 1000 live births) infants not exposed to a vaccine, resulting in an adjusted prevalence ratio of 0.89 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.79 to 1.01). Major congenital anomalies were present in 283 (21.3 per 1000 live births) and 343 (22.7 per 1000 live births) infants exposed to an mRNA covid-19 vaccine in the first trimester and their older siblings not exposed to a vaccine, respectively (adjusted prevalence ratio 0.91, 95% CI 0.77 to 1.07). First trimester vaccination was not associated with an increase in major congenital anomalies grouped by specific organ system in the primary or sibling matched analyses. Results were similar across a range of subgroup and sensitivity analyses.Conclusions In this large population based cohort study and sibling matched analysis, mRNA covid-19 vaccination during the first trimester of pregnancy was not associated with an increase in major congenital anomalies in offspring, overall or grouped by organ system.