美国用于常规免疫的疫苗的安全性。

Margaret A Maglione, Courtney Gidengil, Lopamudra Das, Laura Raaen, Alexandria Smith, Ramya Chari, Sydne Newberry, Susanne Hempel, Roberta Shanman, Tanja Perry, Matthew Bidwell Goetz
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引用次数: 16

摘要

目的:对截至2011年美国儿童、青少年和成人常规免疫推荐疫苗安全性的文献进行系统回顾。数据来源:我们纳入了安慰剂对照临床试验和队列研究,比较接种疫苗和未接种疫苗的患者。我们还纳入了以下类型的许可后分析:病例对照研究、自我控制病例系列和多变量风险因素分析。我们对PubMed从成立到2013年8月进行了电子检索,并审查了免疫实践咨询委员会声明、疫苗包装说明书和先前发表的评论,以确定研究。向疫苗生产商索取了科学信息包。回顾方法:我们回顾了2011年医学研究所(IOM)共识报告“疫苗的不良影响:证据和因果关系”的方法,并接受了他们的发现。我们通过新的研究和额外的疫苗加强了他们的工作。对于未包括在IOM报告中的研究,我们提取了有关是否存在不良健康结果、患者特征、研究设计和疫苗描述(包括品牌、效力、剂量、时间和配方)的数据。我们排除了不在美国使用的配方。使用McHarm工具评估每项研究中不良事件收集和报告的质量。我们无法汇总结果;我们根据医疗保健研究和质量机构对其有效医疗保健计划提出的指导意见,将证据的总体强度(SOE)分为高、中、低或不足。结果:共鉴定出20478个标题;经题目、摘要、全文审阅,共收录166篇研究。绝大多数研究要么没有调查,要么不能确定与疫苗接种相关的不良事件(ae)的危险因素。同样,不良事件严重程度的报告也不一致,可以独立确定严重程度的信息也不一致。在未怀孕的成年人中,SOE与以下相关性较高:季节性流感疫苗与关节痛、肌痛、不适、发烧、注射部位疼痛;2009年单价H1N1疫苗与格林-巴- 综合征(GBS);流感和肺炎球菌疫苗与老年人心血管事件之间缺乏联系。据估计,每百万人接种疫苗后,GBS的风险会增加1.6例。儿童和青少年的以下相关性SOE较高:麻疹、腮腺炎、风疹(MMR)疫苗和5岁以下儿童的发热性惊厥;MMR疫苗与自闭症谱系障碍之间缺乏关联;和水痘疫苗和弥散性奥卡株水痘带状疱疹病毒与相关并发症(即脑膜炎、脑炎)的个体表现出免疫缺陷。有中等程度的SOE表明,轮状病毒疫苗与儿童肠套叠有关;风险估计为每10万剂疫苗1至5例,视品牌而定。有中等强度的证据表明,人乳头瘤病毒疫苗与青少年类风湿性关节炎、1型糖尿病和GBS发病缺乏关联。中等强度的证据显示,灭活流感疫苗与孕妇严重不良反应之间没有关联。关于几种常规推荐的疫苗是否与多发性硬化症、横贯脊髓炎和急性播散性脑脊髓炎等严重疾病相关,证据不足,无法得出结论。结论:有证据表明,一些疫苗与严重不良事件有关;然而,这些事件极为罕见,必须与疫苗提供的保护效益相权衡。应仔细考虑对研究空白的调查,包括可能与ae相关的患者风险因素;然而,在确定研究是否有必要时,必须考虑重要因素,包括所研究声发射的严重程度和频率,以及在调查罕见事件时进行足够有力的研究的挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Safety of Vaccines Used for Routine Immunization in the United States.

Objectives: To conduct a systematic review of the literature on the safety of vaccines recommended for routine immunization of children, adolescents, and adults in the United States as of 2011.

Data sources: We included placebo-controlled clinical trials and cohort studies comparing vaccinated and unvaccinated patients. We also included the following types of post-licensure analyses: case-control studies, self-controlled case series, and multivariate risk factor analyses. We conducted an electronic search of PubMed from inception through August 2013, and reviewed Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices statements, vaccine package inserts, and previously published reviews to identify studies. Scientific Information Packets were requested from vaccine manufacturers.

Review methods: We reviewed the methodology of the 2011 Institute of Medicine (IOM) consensus report "Adverse Effects of Vaccines: Evidence and Causality" and accepted their findings. We augmented their work with new studies and additional vaccines. For studies not included in the IOM report, we abstracted data on the presence or absence of adverse health outcomes, characteristics of patients, study design, and vaccine description, including brand, potency, dosage, timing, and formulation, where available. We excluded formulations not used in the United States. The McHarm instrument was used to evaluate the quality of adverse events collection and reporting in each study. We were unable to pool results; we rated the overall strength of evidence (SOE) as high, moderate, low, or insufficient by using guidance suggested by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality for its Effective Health Care Program.

Results: A total of 20,478 titles were identified; after title, abstract, and full-text review, 166 studies were accepted for abstraction. The vast majority of studies either did not investigate or could not identify risk factors for adverse events (AEs) associated with vaccination. Similarly, the severity of AEs was inconsistently reported, as was information that would make independent severity determination possible.

SOE was high for the following associations in nonpregnant adults: seasonal influenza vaccine and arthralgia, myalgia, malaise, fever, pain at injection site; 2009 monovalent H1N1 vaccine and Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS); and a lack of association between influenza and pneumococcal vaccines and cardiovascular events in the elderly. Risk of GBS was estimated at 1.6 excess cases per million persons vaccinated. SOE was high for the following associations in children and adolescents: measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) vaccine and febrile seizures in children under age 5; lack of association between MMR vaccine and autism spectrum disorders; and varicella vaccine and disseminated Oka strain varicella zoster virus with associated complications (i.e., meningitis, encephalitis) in individuals with demonstrated immunodeficiencies. There is moderate SOE that vaccines against rotavirus are associated with intussusception in children; risk was estimated as 1 to 5 cases per 100,000 vaccine doses, depending on brand. Moderate-strength evidence exists regarding human papillomavirus vaccine and a lack of association with onset of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, type 1 diabetes, and GBS. Moderate-strength evidence shows no association between inactivated influenza vaccine and serious AEs in pregnant women.

Evidence was insufficient to make conclusions regarding whether several routinely recommended vaccines are associated with serious conditions such as multiple sclerosis, transverse myelitis, and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis.

Conclusions: There is evidence that some vaccines are associated with serious adverse events; however, these events are extremely rare and must be weighed against the protective benefits that vaccines provide. Careful consideration should be given to the investigation of research gaps, including patient risk factors that may be associated with AEs; however, important factors must be taken into account when determining whether studies are warranted, including the severity and frequency of the AE being studied and the challenges of conducting sufficiently powered studies when investigating rare events.

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