Published: 11 May 2022

COVID-19

Adverse events following immunisation with COVID-19 vaccines: Safety Report #43 – 30 April 2022

Medsafe advises people NOT to make any decisions about vaccination based on information contained in this report. If you have questions or concerns about receiving a vaccine, please speak to a health care professional.

What you need to know – up to and including 30 April 2022

Note that counts may change due to receipt of additional information.

For the Comirnaty (Pfizer) vaccine

1,114

New AEFI reports since last update

(988 non-serious and 126 serious)

0

New safety signals (potential safety issues) have been identified

 

11,020,882

Total doses administered

(cumulative)

58,799

Total AEFI reports that were non-serious

3,287

Total AEFI reports that were serious

62,086

Total AEFI reports that were received

(cumulative)

For the Vaxzevria (AstraZeneca) vaccine

13

AEFI reports

(12 non-serious and 1 serious)

0

New safety signals (potential safety issues) have been identified

 

8,673

Total doses administered

(cumulative)

284

Total AEFI reports that were non-serious

21

Total AEFI reports that were serious

305

Total AEFI reports that were received

(cumulative)

  • The protective benefits of vaccination against COVID-19 far outweigh the potential risks of vaccination.
  • The Ministry of Health, Medsafe, the Centre for Adverse Reactions Monitoring and manufacturers continue to closely monitor the safety of COVID-19 vaccines. We’ll respond to any safety issues right away and will inform New Zealanders about any risks that arise in New Zealand.
  • For more information about Covid Vaccine Immunisation Programme, please go to Unite against COVID-19 or call Healthline 0800 611 116 to talk to someone about your concerns.
  • Comirnaty: There were 988 non-serious and 126 serious reports since the last update. Sadly, we had 2 more notifications of death in April 2022. Any possibility of a causal link is investigated as part of our routine investigations and no new safety concerns with the Comirnaty vaccine were raised by these two reports. For information about reported deaths, please refer to the summary of reported deaths.
  • Vaxzevria: The vaccine became available on 26 November 2021. Up to 30 April 2022, there have 284 non-serious and 21 serious reports for the Vaxzevria vaccine, including 12 non-serious and 1 serious report since the last update. There have been no notifications of death.
  • Comirnaty: Up to 30 April 2022 a total of 11,020,882 doses of Comirnaty have been administered and 62,086 AEFIs were reported. This means that more than 10.95 million doses of Comirnaty were administered that did not result in a report of an adverse event. On average for every 10,000 people who are vaccinated 56 people report an AEFI. It is also important to keep in mind that a report can be submitted for any cause and is not necessarily associated with the vaccine.
  • Vaxzevria: Up to 30 April 2022, a total of 8,673 doses of Vaxzevria vaccine have been administered and 305 AEFIs were reported. This means that more than 8,300 doses of Vaxzevria vaccine were administered that did not result in a report of an adverse event. On average for every 10,000 people who are vaccinated 352 people report an AEFI. It is also important to keep in mind that a report can be submitted for any cause and is not necessarily associated with the vaccine.
  • Nuvaxovid: The Nuvaxovid COVID-19 vaccine became available in New Zealand on 18 March 2022. Up to 30 April 2022, 3,015 doses of the vaccine had been administered and 42 AEFI reports were submitted. We will provide more information about this vaccine in future safety reports.
  • The next safety report (#44) will be published on 13 July 2022, for the period ending 30 June 2022.

Back to Top

Introduction

The national roll-out of COVID-19 vaccines commenced on 20 February 2021 with Pfizer-BioNTech (Comirnaty). The AstraZeneca vaccine (also known as Vaxzevria) became available on 26 November 2021, and Nuvaxovid on 18 March 2022.

This page provides information on the number of adverse events following immunisation (AEFI) reports received for COVID-19 vaccines.

An AEFI is an untoward medical event which follows immunisation and does not necessarily have a causal relationship with the administration of the vaccine. The adverse event may be an unfavourable or unintended sign, abnormal laboratory finding, symptom or disease.

All medicines can cause side effects, the known side effects for COVID-19 vaccines are listed in the data sheets and consumer medicine information (CMI).

Search for a data sheet or CMI

Suspected AEFI to COVID-19 vaccines are reported to the Centre for Adverse Reactions Monitoring (CARM). The Ministry of Health (through Medsafe) contracts the collection of this information to CARM, based at the University of Otago in Dunedin. Medsafe is closely monitoring the AEFI reported from the use of the COVID-19 vaccine. Find out more about vaccine safety monitoring.

Medsafe and CARM thank everyone who has contributed to the monitoring of COVID-19 vaccines. Please continue to report any adverse events following immunisation.

Back to Top

Adverse events following immunisation (AEFI) reported

The information below includes:

  • AEFI reports by prioritised ethnicity and vaccine dose
  • AEFI reports by age band and vaccine dose
  • the top 10 most frequently reported AEFIs by vaccine dose
  • reported AEFIs by reporter type.

Table 1: AEFI reports received by prioritised ethnicity and vaccine dose, by vaccine, up to and including 30 April 2022

Ethnicitya Comirnaty Vaxzevria
Dose 1 Dose 2 Dose 3 Total Total
Māori 2,635 2,081 856 5,572 31
Pacific Peoples 791 741 283 1,815 3
Asian 2,762 2,275 1,255 6,292 12
European or other 20,906 17,758 8,902 47,566 256
Unknownb 403 301 118 822 3
Total 27,497  23,156  11,414  62,067c 305d

Notes:

  1. The prioritised ethnicity classification system allocates each person to a single ethnic group, based on the ethnic groups they identify with. Where people identify with more than one group, they are assigned in this order of priority: Māori, Pacific Peoples, Asian, and European/Other. So, if a person identifies as being Māori and New Zealand European, the person is counted as Māori. See Ethnicity Data Protocols for further information.
  2. There were 822 Comirnaty and 3 Vaxzevria AEFI reports where the person’s ethnicity was not reported. Counts may change due to receipt of additional information. Ethnicity is not required for an AEFI report to be considered valid. See ‘Valid report’ in the Definitions section below.
  3. The Comirnaty total is different from the cumulative total above because it excludes 19 AEFI reports received for infants who did not receive the vaccine.
  4. Due to the low numbers of reports to date, only totals for Vaxzevria are shown to protect privacy.

Table 2: AEFI reports received by age band and vaccine dose, by vaccine, up to and including 30 April 2022

Age Comirnaty Vaxzevria
Dose 1 Dose 2 Dose 3 Total Total
5 - 11 years 619 157 0 776 0
12 - 19 years 2,825 1,756 247 4,828 9
20 - 29 years 5,329 4,073 2,078 11,480 41
30 - 39 years 5,989 5,083 2,631 13,703 67
40 - 49 years 4,705 4,428 2,333 11,466 76
50 - 59 years 3,978 3,741 2,048 9,767 79
60 - 69 years 2,392 2,262 1,238 5,892 24
70 - 79 years 1,137 1,158 596 2,891 7
80+ years 484 478 236 1,198 2
Unknowna 39 20 7 66 0
Total 27,497  23,156  11,414  62,067b 305c

Notes:

  1. There were 66 Comirnaty AEFI reports where the person’s age was not reported. Counts may change due to receipt of additional information. Age is not required for an AEFI report to be considered valid. See ‘Valid report’ in the Definitions section below.
  2. The Comirnaty total is different from the cumulative total above because it excludes 19 AEFI reports received for infants who did not receive the vaccine.
  3. Due to the low numbers of reports to date, only totals for Vaxzevria are shown to protect privacy.

Figure 1: Top 10 most frequently reported AEFIs for the Comirnaty vaccine, by dose, up to and including 30 April 2022

Table 3: Top 10 most frequently reported AEFIs for the Comirnaty vaccine, by dose, up to and including 30 April 2022

Reaction Number any dose Number dose 1 Number dose 2 Number dose 3
Headache 19,008 6,830 8,152 4,026
Dizziness 17,847 9,203 6,068 2,576
Injection site pain 15,959 5,506 6,570 3,883
Lethargy 14,667 5,517 6,735 2,415
Nausea 12,847 5,428 4,994 2,425
Chest discomfort 12,707 5,385 4,827 2,495
Fever 8,792 2,167 4,341 2,284
Influenza-like illness 8,347 2,275 4,058 2,014
Lymphadenopathy 7,340 1,294 2,880 3,166
Shortness of breath 7,269 3,181 2,849 1,239

Figure 2: Top 10 most frequently reported AEFIs for the Vaxzevria vaccine, any dose, up to and including 30 April 2022

Table 4: Top 10 most frequently reported AEFIs for the Vaxzevria vaccine, any dose, up to and including 30 April 2022

Reaction Number any dose
Headache 144
Dizziness 103
Lethargy 96
Fever 93
Injection site pain 92
Chest discomfort 90
Influenza-like illness 89
Nausea 88
Shortness of breath 62
Anxiety 62


Download a list of the top 50 most frequently reported AEFIs (any dose) (Excel 21 KB).

Table 5: Reported AEFIs by reporter type (any vaccine) up to and including 30 April 2022

Reporter type Number of reportsa
Public Patient 25,896
CIR Vaccinator 14,885
Nurse 8,477
Other 5,748
General Practitioner 8,106
Public: On behalf of a patient 2,153
Pharmacist 366
Not specified 114
  1. The total number here differs from the total reported cases elsewhere because a single case can contain multiple reports from different sources.

Please note that one adverse event report, which represents one person, may report on more than one symptom. Reports are sent to CARM if the reporter suspects that the vaccine may have caused the event. This does not necessarily mean that the vaccine did cause the event.

The number of reports can be influenced by how many people are being vaccinated, media attention, the nature of the events (eg, how painful the vaccination was), and other factors which vary over time. Not everyone who has an adverse reaction reports it, and some people may report AEFIs after each vaccination. The information here shows the number of reports not the number of people who experienced an AEFI.

The information is limited by the information provided in the report and may change over time due to quality control procedures and/or receipt of additional information. Non-valid reports are not included in the data.

Back to Top

Summary of reported deaths

Up to and including 30 April 2022, a total of 160 deaths were reported to CARM after the administration of the Comirnaty vaccine. Following medical assessments by CARM and Medsafe it has been determined that:

  • 99 of these deaths are unlikely related to the COVID-19 vaccine
  • 48 deaths could not be assessed due to insufficient information
  • 10 cases are still under investigation.
  • 3 deaths were likely due to vaccine induced myocarditis (awaiting Coroner’s determination)

By chance, some people will experience new illnesses or die from a pre-existing condition shortly after vaccination, especially if they are elderly. Therefore, part of our review process includes comparing natural death rates to observed death rates following vaccination, to determine if there are any specific trends or patterns that might indicate a vaccine safety concern. See below for more information about these observed-versus-expected analyses.

To date, the observed number of deaths reported after vaccination is actually less than the expected number of natural deaths.

There have been no deaths reported for the Vaxzevria vaccine.

Table 6: Mortalities by age group up to and including 30 April 2022 reported to CARM

Age Mortalitiesa
10 - 29 years 8
30 - 59 years 31
60 - 79 years 72
80+ years 49
  1. Counts may change due to receipt of additional information, for example, identification of duplicate reports.

Back to Top

Observed-versus-expected analyses – Comirnaty vaccine

It is important to note that no conclusions should be made from these observed-versus-expected analyses in isolation. Other investigations looking at pre-existing risk factors are always required.

The analyses below show that the number of deaths recorded in the mortality register for people vaccinated with the Comirnaty vaccine is lower than expected based on the average number of deaths in previous years over the same number of days (natural death rate).

For these observed-versus-expected analyses, we compare the vaccinated population to natural (expected) rates (taken from past data). The comparison is done by dividing the observed rate of death in the vaccinated population by the expected rate to give the relative risk (RR).

Observed / Expected Rate = Relative Risk (RR)

The methods used to calculate the relative risk also provide a confidence interval (CI). The confidence interval is a range of values that we are fairly sure our true value lies in. We are using a 95 percent confidence interval (95% CI), which is the range that will include the true value 95 percent of the time. If both the relative risk AND the lower end of the confidence interval are greater than one (>1.0), this is statistically significant and could indicate an increased risk of death in the vaccinated population. This will be highlighted in the table when applicable.

We are monitoring people for 21 days after vaccination. This monitoring period was chosen because people can receive their second dose a minimum of 21 days after the first dose. Age-specific natural (expected) death rates were obtained for the period 2008–2019. One reason for the number of deaths in the vaccinated group appearing to be lower could be that healthcare professional of extremely frail patients give the advice not to get vaccinated.

These analyses do not consider causality and instead, report on all deaths that have occurred in the monitoring period (observed deaths). This results in a much higher number than those reported to CARM where the reporter (eg, family member or health care provider) might have had a suspicion the vaccine could have played a role. The number of observed deaths also includes deaths from other causes, such as deaths due to accidents, medical conditions, other medicines or medical treatments.

Please note that the mortality collections operate many weeks in arrears. This means that these observed-versus-expected analyses will also be in arrears – for example, the tables below are for the period up to 28 February 2022.

Table 7: Observed-versus-expected deathsa by age group from any cause, up to 21 days after Comirnaty dose 1, 19 February 2021 to 28 February 2022

Age Dose 1 – number administered Expected deathsb in monitoring period Observed deathsc in monitoring period Relative riskc
(95% confidence interval)
0 to 9 162,305 5.21 0 - d
10 to 19 575,985 10.65 12 1.13e [0.58 – 1.97]
20 to 29 647,739 22.45 24 1.07f [0.68 – 1.59]
30 to 39 674,239 30.98 14 0.45 [0.25 – 0.76]
40 to 49 591,484 57.35 24 0.42 [0.27 – 0.62]
50 to 59 606,975 135.39 64 0.47 [0.36 – 0.60]
60 to 69 515,770 268.86 126 0.47 [0.39 – 0.56]
70 to 79 348,951 491.52 239 0.49 [0.43 – 0.55]
80+ 182,593 1,083.76 600 0.55 [0.51 – 0.60]
Total 4,306,041 2,106.16 1,103 0.52 [0.49 – 0.56]
  1. Expected and observed deaths among people who have received dose 1 of the Comirnaty vaccine during the specified period, by age group. Inclusion criteria were: monitoring time of 21 days after receiving dose 1, all genders, all ethnicities, aged 5 years and older. The data was collected from the Mortality database.
  2. Data for expected death rates was obtained from the AESI background rate (SAFE) study provided by the University of Auckland (however, please note that the publicly available information only shows rates of sudden death not all deaths). The age-specific background rates used are the average from 2008-2019.
  3. The observed deaths column (4th column) is a raw data observation, and this is used to calculate the relative risk (5th column).
  4. The relative risk has not been calculated for the 0 - 9 years age group because no deaths were observed during the monitoring period.
  5. The relative risk of 1.13 does not indicate there is an increased risk of mortality in the 10 - 19 age group because the lower end of the confidence interval is 0.58 (ie, <1.0). The COVID-19 Independent Safety Monitoring Board (CV-ISMB) has reviewed AEFIs in children and found that this group was not disproportionately affected by the vaccine. Medsafe will continue to monitor this closely.
  6. The relative risk of 1.07 does not indicate there is an increased risk of mortality in the 20 - 29 year age group because the lower end of the confidence interval is 0.68 (ie, <1.0).

Table 8: Observed-versus-expected deathsa by age group from any cause, up to 21 days after Comirnaty dose 2, 19 February 2021 to 28 February 2022

Age Dose 2 – number administered Expected deathsb in monitoring period Observed deathsc in monitoring period Relative riskc
(95% confidence interval)
0 to 9 2,052 0.03 0 - d
10 to 19 476,625 8.85 9 1.02e [0.47 – 1.93]
20 to 29 634,245 21.93 6 0.27 [0.10 – 0.60]
30 to 39 664,125 30.46 16 0.53 [0.30 – 0.85]
40 to 49 584,035 56.56 32 0.57 [0.39 – 0.80]
50 to 59 602,365 134.26 82 0.61 [0.49 – 0.76]
60 to 69 514,484 268.02 151 0.56 [0.48 – 0.66]
70 to 79 348,863 491.22 217 0.44 [0.38 – 0.50]
80+ 182,213 1,081.04 620 0.57 [0.53 – 0.62]
Total 4,009,007 2,092.37 1,133 0.54 [0.51 – 0.57]
  1. Expected and observed deaths among people who have received dose 2 of the Comirnaty vaccine during the specified period, by age group. Inclusion criteria were: monitoring time of 21 days after receiving dose 2, all genders, all ethnicities, aged 5 years and older. The data was collected from the Mortality database.
  2. Data for expected death rates was obtained from the AESI background rate (SAFE) study provided by the University of Auckland (however, please note that the publicly available information only shows rates of sudden death not all deaths). The age-specific background rates used are the average from 2008-2019.
  3. The observed deaths column is a raw data observation, and this is used to calculate the relative risk (5th column).
  4. The relative risk has not been calculated for the 0 - 9 age group because no deaths were observed during the monitoring period.
  5. The relative risk of 1.02 does not indicate there is an increased risk of mortality in the 12 - 19 age group because the lower end of the confidence interval is 0.47 (ie, <1.0). The COVID-19 Independent Safety Monitoring Board (CV-ISMB) has reviewed AEFIs in children and found that this group was not disproportionately affected by the vaccine. Medsafe will continue to monitor this closely.

Table 9: Observed-versus-expected deathsa by age group from any cause, up to 21 days after Comirnaty dose 3, 19 February 2021 to 28 February 2022

Age Dose 3 – number administered Expected deathsb in monitoring period Observed deathsc in monitoring period Relative riskc
(95% confidence interval)
10 to 19 49,849 0.69 0 - d
20 to 29 271,781 7.07 <6 - e
30 to 39 343,796 12.41 <6 - f
40 to 49 369,301 29.74 7 0.24 [0.09 – 0.48]
50 to 59 436,679 86.04 36 0.42 [0.29 – 0.58]
60 to 69 425,129 207.33 80 0.39 [0.31 – 0.48]
70 to 79 312,914 424.77 160 0.38 [0.32 – 0.44]
80+ 167,294 956.63 459 0.48 [0.44 – 0.53]
Total 2,376,743 1,724.69 746 0.43 [0.40 – 0.46]
  1. Expected and observed deaths among people who have received dose 3 (including the ‘booster’ dose) of the Comirnaty vaccine during the specified period, by age group. Inclusion criteria were: monitoring time of 21 days after receiving dose 3, all genders, all ethnicities, aged 12 years and older. The data was collected from the Mortality database.
  2. Data for expected death rates was obtained from the AESI background rate (SAFE) study provided by the University of Auckland (however, please note that the publicly available information only shows rates of sudden death not all deaths). The age-specific background rates used are the average from 2008-2019.
  3. The observed deaths column is a raw data observation, and this is used to calculate the relative risk (5th column).
  4. The relative risk has not been calculated for the 12 - 19 year olds because no deaths were observed during the monitoring period.
  5. The relative risk has not been calculated for the 20 - 29 year olds because fewer than six deaths have occurred in this age group.
  6. The relative risk has not been calculated for the 30 - 39 year olds because fewer than six deaths have occurred in this age group.

For further reading about the methodology used to analyse death rates, see:

Download the data used to calculate the number of expected deaths in the monitoring period:

Expected mortality data (Excel 21 KB)

Back to Top

Adverse events of special interest

Adverse events of special interest (AESI) are pre-specified medically significant events that have the potential to be causally associated with the vaccine and must be carefully monitored. AESI can be serious or non-serious and can include:

  • Events of interest due to their association with COVID-19 infection
  • Events of interest for vaccines in general (eg, to the specific vaccine type or adjuvants).

The list of AESIs below takes into consideration the lists of AESIs from expert groups such as the Brighton Collaboration, manufacturers and other regulatory authorities. The AESI list changes based on the evolving safety profile of vaccines. It is important to note that although these adverse events may occur after being vaccinated with a COVID-19 vaccine in New Zealand, they are rare and may not necessarily be related to the vaccine. Medsafe and CARM review the reports to determine whether the vaccine may have played a role in the occurrence of these events.

Table 10: Adverse events of special interest (AESI) up to and including 30 April 2022

AESI Category AESI Comirnaty totala Vaxzevria totala Background rate (hospitalisations per year)b
Immune system disorders Guillain-Barré Syndrome 30 0 273
Thrombocytopenia 38 <6 4,325
Thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS) n/ac 0  
Anaphylaxisd 126 <6 1,102
Cardiovascular system Myocardial infarction (heart attack) 88 0 16,347
Myocarditis/pericarditis 839 <6 931
Blood and lymphatic system Thrombosis 62 0 2,863
Embolism 148 <6 4,571
Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) 120 <6 519
Vasculitis 73 0 4,325
Haemorrhagee 156 0  
Hepato-gastrointestinal and renal system Acute kidney injury 27 0 38,631
Acute liver injury <6 0 420
Pancreatitis 14 0 6,137
Appendicitis 23 0 3,359
Nervous system Aseptic meningitis <6 0 744
Encephalitis 11 0 409
Stroke 121 0 14,776
Bell's Palsy/facial paralysis 223 <6 694
Myelitis/myelitis transverse 8 0 53
Infections and musculoskeletal Erythema multiforme 19 0 97
Arthritis 116 0 178
Herpes zoster 392 <6 1,148
Pregnancy, puerperium and perinatal conditions Abortion (spontaneous abortion /miscarriage) 66 0 290
  1. Includes all AESI reports, both serious and non-serious. Counts below 6 are reported as <6 for privacy reasons. Counts may change due to receipt of additional information and subsequent reclassification of cases.
  2. AESI background hospitalisation rates used to estimate the expected number of events in the general population, which help in vaccine safety surveillance. Counts indicate average of hospitalisation rates for the calendar years 2016-2019.
  3. The thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS) AESI occurs only in non-replicating viral vaccines (eg, the Vaxzevria vaccine)
  4. Includes anaphylaxis reports meeting levels 1-3 of the Brighton Collaboration case definition. Note that the anaphylaxis numbers in reports #39-42 incorrectly included cases that met levels 4 and 5 of the Brighton Collaboration case definition.
  5. Haemorrhage can manifest in different ways depending on the mechanism and anatomic location. It is difficult to know if the haemorrhage was minor or significant through the hospitalisation background rates.

Download a list of all ICD-10 codes used to produce the hospitalisation rates for Table 10.

ICD-10 Codes (Excel, 23 KB)

Further information on Myocarditis and Pericarditis

Myocarditis is inflammation of the heart muscle, while pericarditis is inflammation of the tissue forming a sac around the heart. Myo-pericarditis means that both the heart muscle and the sac are inflamed.

There are many possible causes of myocarditis, the most common being viral infection. New Zealand data from the Global Vaccine Data Network indicates that the background rate of non-infective myocarditis (pre COVID-19) in the overall population from 2011 to 2019 was 1.81 per 100,000 person-years.

Up to 29 April 2022, the Centre for Adverse Reactions Monitoring (CARM) has received 443 spontaneous reports of myocarditis, pericarditis or myopericarditis where the report contained evidence of a clinical diagnosis and the symptom onset time was within 30 days of vaccination (to reduce the risk of including coincidental cases). These reports do not necessarily have a causal relationship with administration of Comirnaty and may represent coincidental events. The age ranges, by dose number, are shown in Figure 3. The time to onset of symptoms, by dose number, is shown in Figure 4. Of the 443 reports, 62 percent were for males. Thirty five percent of reports were associated with dose one, 46% of reports were associated with dose two and 19% reported that the myocarditis/pericarditis was experienced after dose three.

Figure 3: Ages of people reported with myocarditis/pericarditis after Comirnaty vaccination in New Zealand, by dose number, up to 29 April 2022

Table 11: Ages of people reported with myocarditis/pericarditis after Comirnaty vaccination in New Zealand, by dose number, up to 29 April 2022

10 year age band Dose 1 Dose 2 Dose 3 Total
< 10 0 0 0 0
10 to 19 16 28 5 49
20 to 29 37 62 25 124
30 to 39 46 45 30 121
40 to 49 28 30 6 64
50 to 59 19 17 5 41
60 to 69 5 12 7 24
70 to 79 3 6 5 14
80 plus 2 2 2 6
Total 156 202 85 443

Figure 4: Time to onset of symptoms of myocarditis/pericarditis after Comirnaty vaccination in New Zealand, by dose number, up to 29 April 2022

Table 12: Time to onset of symptoms of myocarditis/pericarditis after Comirnaty vaccination in New Zealand, by dose number, up to 29 April 2022

Onset time (days) Dose 1 Dose 2 Dose 3
0 35 57 28
1 25 36 16
2 18 30 5
3 13 17 10
4 10 3 5
5 9 4 3
6 8 5 2
7 4 5 2
8 1 3 1
9 4 2 5
10 2 3 1
11 0 2 0
12 1 3 2
13 1 4 0
14 0 2 0
15 2 1 0
16 3 2 0
17 2 2 1
18 2 2 0
19 0 1 0
20 plus 8 13 0

Back to Top

Summary of safety signals

There have been no new safety signals identified since the last safety report. Medsafe will continue to monitor reports for safety signals through routine pharmacovigilance.

Table 13: Summary of Medsafe’s investigations into possible safety signals

Safety signal Outcome
Comirnaty vaccine
Blood clots Continue to monitor. See also the Monitoring communication
Appendicitis Continue to monitor
Myocarditis/pericarditis Information has been added to Comirnaty data sheet. See also the Alert communication. Medsafe will continue to monitor this closely.
Herpes zoster Continue to monitor
Bell’s palsy/facial paralysis Continue to monitor
Menstrual disorder Continue to monitor. See also the monitoring communication.
Stroke Continue to monitor
Tinnitus Continue to monitor
AEFIs in the elderly Continue to monitor and updated data sheet
Pancreatitis Continue to monitor
Glomerular diseases Continue to monitor
Guillain-Barré Syndrome Continue to monitor
Thrombocytopenia Continue to monitor
AEFIs in children Continue to monitor
Erythema multiforme Continue to monitor
Pregnancy Continue to monitor. See also the monitoring communication.
Persisting disability Continue to monitor
Thyroid conditions Continue to monitor
Vaxzevria vaccine
Overview of AEFI reports to date No safety signals identified

Back to Top

Definitions

Adverse event following immunisation (AEFI)
An AEFI is an untoward medical event which follows immunisation and does not necessarily have a causal relationship with the administration of the vaccine. The adverse event may be an unfavourable or unintended sign, abnormal laboratory finding, symptom or disease.
Serious adverse event following immunisation
An AEFI is considered serious if it:
  • is a medically important event or reaction
  • requires hospitalisation or prolongs an existing hospitalisation
  • causes persistent or significant disability or incapacity
  • is life threatening
  • causes a congenital anomaly/birth defect
  • results in death.
It is possible for different people to have experienced the same event but for the report to be serious for one person and non-serious for another person.
Adverse events of special interest (AESI)
An AESI is a pre-specified medically significant event that has the potential to be causally associated with the vaccine product based on past experience, the technology used to make the vaccine or the infection the vaccine is used to protect against. AESIs need to be carefully monitored and any potential association to vaccination confirmed by further analysis and studies.
Safety signal
Information on a new or known adverse event that may be caused by the vaccine and requires further investigation. Safety signals can be detected from a wide range of sources such as CARM reports, clinical studies and scientific literature.
Valid report
There are only four requirements for a valid AEFI report:
  1. one patient identifier (eg, name, initials, gender, date of birth, age)
  2. suspect medicine(s)
  3. suspected reaction(s)
  4. reporter details.
These four requirements are the minimum requirements. However, including more information in the report helps Medsafe to investigate the reaction more quickly. Reporting is easiest online.

Back to Top

More information

See the data sheets and consumer medicine information for the expected reactions for approved COVID-19 vaccines.

COVID-19 Vaccine Safety Monitoring Process

View Ministry of Health COVID-19 vaccine data

Latest listing of all cases received

The latest listing of AEFIs received is included in the attached spreadsheet. Medsafe advises patients NOT to make any decisions about vaccination based on information contained here.

Download AEFI-line-listing.xlsx (Excel, 8134 KB)

Hide menus
Show menus
0 1 2 4 5 6 7 9 [ /