Generic placeholder image

Current Drug Safety

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1574-8863
ISSN (Online): 2212-3911

Reporting Rates of Yellow Fever Vaccine 17D or 17DD-Associated Serious Adverse Events in Pharmacovigilance Data Bases: Systematic Review

Author(s): Roger E. Thomas, Diane L. Lorenzetti, Wendy Spragins, Dave Jackson and Tyler Williamson

Volume 6, Issue 3, 2011

Page: [145 - 154] Pages: 10

DOI: 10.2174/157488611797579258

Price: $65

Abstract

Purpose: To assess the reporting rates of serious adverse events attributable to yellow fever vaccination with 17D and 17DD strains as reported in pharmacovigilance databases, and assess reasons for differences in reporting rates. Methods: We searched 9 electronic databases for peer reviewed and grey literature (government reports, conferences), in all languages. Reference lists of key studies were also reviewed to identify additional studies. Results: We identified 2,415 abstracts, of which 472 were selected for full text review. We identified 15 pharmacovigilance databases which reported adverse events attributed to yellow fever vaccination, of which 10 contributed data to this review with about 107,600,000 patients (allowing for overlapping time periods for the studies of the US VAERS database), and the data are very heavily weighted (94%) by the Brazilian database. The estimates of serious adverse events form three groups. The estimates for Australia were low at 0/210,656 for “severe neurological disease” and 1/210,656 for YEL-AVD, and also low for Brazil with 9 hypersensitivity events, 0.23 anaphylactic shock events, 0.84 neurologic syndrome events and 0.19 viscerotropic events cases/million doses. The five analyses of partly overlapping periods for the US VAERS database provide an estimate of 3.6/cases per million YEL-AND in one analysis and 7.8 in another, and 3.1 YEL-AVD in one analysis and 3.9 in another. The estimates for the UK used only the inclusive term of “serious adverse events” not further classified into YEL-And or YEL-AND and reported 34 “serious adverse events.” The Swiss database used the term “serious adverse events” and reported 7 such events (including 4 “neurologic reactions”) for a reporting rate of 25 “serious adverse events”/million doses. Conclusions: Reporting rates for serious adverse events following yellow fever vaccination are low. Differences in reporting rates may be due to differences in definitions, surveillance system organisation, methods of reporting cases, administration of YFV with other vaccines, incomplete information about denominators, time intervals for reporting events, the degree of passive reporting, access to diagnostic resources, and differences in time periods of reporting.

Keywords: Pharmacovigilance, risk of bias, serious adverse effects, systematic review, yellow fever, yellow fever 17D and 17DD vaccine


Rights & Permissions Print Cite
© 2024 Bentham Science Publishers | Privacy Policy