Murdoch Childrens Research Institute
Browse

Factors influencing adverse events following COVID-19 vaccination.

journal contribution
posted on 2025-07-18, 01:51 authored by Paola VillanuevaPaola Villanueva, Ellie McDonaldEllie McDonald, Julio Croda, Mariana Garcia Croda, Margareth Dalcolmo, Glauce Dos Santos, Bruno Jardim, Marcus Lacerda, David J Lynn, Helen Marshall, Roberto D Oliveira, Jorge Rocha, Alice Sawka, Fernando Val, Laure PittetLaure Pittet, Nicole MessinaNicole Messina, Richard CurtisRichard Curtis
Various novel platform technologies have been used for the development of COVID-19 vaccines. In this nested cohort study among healthcare workers in Australia and Brazil who received three different COVID-19-specific vaccines, we (a) evaluated the incidence of adverse events following immunization (AEFI); (b) compared AEFI by vaccine type, dose and country; (c) identified factors influencing the incidence of AEFI; and (d) assessed the association between reactogenicity and vaccine anti-spike IgG antibody responses. Of 1302 participants who received homologous 2-dose regimens of ChAdOx1-S (Oxford-AstraZeneca), BNT162b2 (Pfizer-BioNTech) or CoronaVac (Sinovac), 1219 (94%) completed vaccine reaction questionnaires. Following the first vaccine dose, the incidence of any systemic reaction was higher in ChAdOx1-S recipients (374/806, 46%) compared with BNT162b2 (55/151, 36%; p = 0.02) or CoronaVac (26/262, 10%; p < 0.001) recipients. After the second vaccine dose, the incidence of any systemic reaction was higher in BNT162b2 recipients (66/151, 44%) compared with ChAdOx1-S (164/806, 20%; p < 0.001) or CoronaVac (23/262, 9%; p < 0.001) recipients. AEFI risk was higher in younger participants, females, participants in Australia, and varied by vaccine type and dose. Prior COVID-19 did not impact the risk of AEFI. Participants in Australia compared with Brazil reported a higher incidence of any local reaction (170/231, 74% vs 222/726, 31%, p < 0.001) and any systemic reaction (171/231, 74% vs 328/726, 45%, p < 0.001), regardless of vaccine type. Following a primary course of ChAdOx1-S or CoronaVac vaccination, participants who did not report AEFI seroconverted at a similar rate to those who reported local or systemic reactions. In conclusion, we found that the incidence of AEFI was influenced by participant age and COVID-19 vaccine type, and differed between participants in Australia and Brazil.

Funding

Improving the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of infectious diseases in children : National Health and Medical Research Council | 1197117

History

Related Materials

Pagination

2323853-

Volume

20

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Issue

1

Journal

Hum Vaccin Immunother

Language

eng

Location

United States

Medium

Print-Electronic

Publisher licence

CC BY

Online publication date

2024-03-06

Publication date

2024-12-31

Associated identifiers

grant.9143731 (dimensions-grant-id)

Publication status

  • Published