Characterization and analysis of neurologic adverse events associated with COVID-19 vaccination (S12.006)
Objective: To characterize the incidence and spectrum of neurological adverse events (AE) after COVID-19 vaccination. Background: The devastating COVID-19 pandemic has led to 230 million people diagnosed and greater than 4.8 million deaths worldwide. Widespread vaccination efforts have resulted i...
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Published: |
Wolters Kluwer Health
2022
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Online Access: | http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/100671/ https://n.neurology.org/content/98/18_Supplement/3784 |
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Summary: | Objective: To characterize the incidence and spectrum of neurological adverse events (AE) after COVID-19 vaccination.
Background: The devastating COVID-19 pandemic has led to 230 million people diagnosed and greater than 4.8 million deaths worldwide. Widespread vaccination efforts have resulted in administration of over 6 million vaccine doses to curb the significant health and socioeconomic impacts of the disease. While there are numerous reports of adverse events following COVID-19 vaccine, there is limited characterization of the spectrum of neurological AEs post-vaccination.
Design/Methods: Data was gathered from the publicly available Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), a passive reporting system not implying causality. Among individuals who received the J&J, Moderna, and Pfizer vaccines from 1/1/2021–6/14/2021, 314,610 adverse events were reported and these were reviewed by Neurology trained clinicians to determine the presence of various neurological AEs (40 conditions coded).
Results: 306,473,169 COVID vaccine dose were administered in the USA during the study period with 314,610 total AEs (0.10%) and 105,930 neurological AEs (0.03%) reported. J&J vaccine was associated with the most AEs (17,670, 0.15%), followed by Moderna (42656, 0.03%) and Pfizer (42267, 0.03%). On average more events were reported in women (71%) and a majority occurred after the first dose (54%). < 1 events were reported per million vaccine doses for serious neurological conditions such as Bell’s palsy (0.0007%), Guillain-Barre syndrome (0.00009%), cerebral venous thrombosis (0.00005%), transverse myelitis (0.00003%), and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (0.00006%). Overall neurological complications following vaccine were drastically lower than complications post-COVID infection (14–80%).
Conclusions: Adverse neurological events following COVID-19 vaccination are extremely rare and significantly less common than adverse neurological effects following SARS-CoV-2 infection. Current evidence suggests that along with being up to 100,000 times more likely to experience a major complication from COVID infection vs. vaccine, the risk of neurological complication is up to 5000 times more likely from infection itself. |
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