Post-marketing evaluation of the short term safety of COMVAX

We report an evaluation of the short-term safety of a pediatric bivalent combination vaccine containing RECOMBIVAXHB ® and Liquid PedvaxHIB ®, COMVAX ®. Safety was assessed through identification of medical utilization; potential adverse events were identified through computerized clinical databases...

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Veröffentlicht in:Vaccine 2004-01, Vol.22 (3), p.536-543
Hauptverfasser: Davis, Robert L., Black, Steven, Shinefield, Henry, Mahoney, Lisa, Zavitkovsky, Ann, Lewis, Edwin, Nikas, Alex, Guess, Harry, Coplan, Paul
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container_end_page 543
container_issue 3
container_start_page 536
container_title Vaccine
container_volume 22
creator Davis, Robert L.
Black, Steven
Shinefield, Henry
Mahoney, Lisa
Zavitkovsky, Ann
Lewis, Edwin
Nikas, Alex
Guess, Harry
Coplan, Paul
description We report an evaluation of the short-term safety of a pediatric bivalent combination vaccine containing RECOMBIVAXHB ® and Liquid PedvaxHIB ®, COMVAX ®. Safety was assessed through identification of medical utilization; potential adverse events were identified through computerized clinical databases for deaths, hospitalizations, emergency room visits, and outpatient clinic visits. We calculated relative risks whenever there was at least one diagnosis-specific event in the risk period following vaccination and compared the rates in specific time windows following vaccination with rates at 31–60 days following vaccination and also with rates in a historical cohort of children. A total of 27,802 doses of COMVAX ® were administered, with 127 separate adverse event codes with statistically significant elevated risks, and 66 codes with significantly decreased risks. Most potentially serious diagnoses appeared in four major categories: “Respiratory Events”; “Gastroenteritis”; “Adverse Effect of Medicinal and Biological Substance, NOS”; and “Fever”. There was no consistent pattern to indicate increased risks for serious respiratory or gastrointestinal illness. For fever, most of the findings appeared to be explained by changes in data collection or by concomitant vaccination with M-M-R -II ®. There was an increased risk for fever hospitalizations following shot 1. The total number of children hospitalized with fever was seven out of 12,468 children; all recovered fully. In this study population of 27,802 vaccine recipients, COMVAX appeared to have a favorable safety profile.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.vaccine.2003.06.001
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Safety was assessed through identification of medical utilization; potential adverse events were identified through computerized clinical databases for deaths, hospitalizations, emergency room visits, and outpatient clinic visits. We calculated relative risks whenever there was at least one diagnosis-specific event in the risk period following vaccination and compared the rates in specific time windows following vaccination with rates at 31–60 days following vaccination and also with rates in a historical cohort of children. A total of 27,802 doses of COMVAX ® were administered, with 127 separate adverse event codes with statistically significant elevated risks, and 66 codes with significantly decreased risks. Most potentially serious diagnoses appeared in four major categories: “Respiratory Events”; “Gastroenteritis”; “Adverse Effect of Medicinal and Biological Substance, NOS”; and “Fever”. There was no consistent pattern to indicate increased risks for serious respiratory or gastrointestinal illness. For fever, most of the findings appeared to be explained by changes in data collection or by concomitant vaccination with M-M-R -II ®. There was an increased risk for fever hospitalizations following shot 1. The total number of children hospitalized with fever was seven out of 12,468 children; all recovered fully. 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subjects Age
Asthma
Bacteriology
Biological and medical sciences
Children & youth
COMVAX
Data collection
Emergency medical care
Emergency medical services
Epidemiology. Vaccinations
Female
Fever
Fever - epidemiology
Follow-Up Studies
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Gastroenteritis
Gastroenteritis - epidemiology
General aspects
Haemophilus Vaccines - administration & dosage
Haemophilus Vaccines - adverse effects
Hepatitis
Hospitalization
Humans
Immunization
Immunization Schedule
Infant
Infectious diseases
Male
Medical sciences
Microbiology
Nausea
No-Observed-Adverse-Effect Level
Post-marketing
Preventive medicine
Product Surveillance, Postmarketing
Respiratory Tract Diseases - epidemiology
Risk Assessment
Risk reduction
Safety
Vaccination
Vaccine safety
Vaccines
Vaccines, antisera, therapeutical immunoglobulins and monoclonal antibodies
Vaccines, Conjugate - adverse effects
Vaccines, Synthetic - adverse effects
Vaccines, Synthetic - immunology
Virology
Vomiting
title Post-marketing evaluation of the short term safety of COMVAX
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