- Data published from UK’s independent medicines regulator
confirms approved vaccines meet strict regulatory standards for
safety
- Vast majority of reported side effects are mild and short
lasting, reflecting a normal immune response to vaccines –
including a sore arm and fatigue
- The benefits of the COVID-19 vaccines outweigh the risks
Routine safety monitoring and analysis of the approved COVID-19
vaccines by the UK’s medicines regulator, the Medicines and
Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), shows that the
safety of these vaccines remains as high as expected from the
clinical trial data that supported the approvals. The safety
profile of the vaccines remains positive and the benefits
continue to far outweigh any known side-effects.
Over 10 million doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech and the Oxford
University/AstraZeneca vaccines have been given across the UK and
the MHRA has gathered a large amount of safety data. Data
published today shows 22,820 reports of suspected side effects,
or an overall reporting rate of 3 in 1,000 doses of vaccine
administered from 9 December 2020 to 24 January 2021. This
reassuring data has shown that the vast majority of reported side
effects are mild and all are in line with most types of vaccine,
including the seasonal flu vaccine. These include sore arms and
mild ‘flu-like’ symptoms, which reflect a normal immune response
to vaccines and are short-lasting.
The MHRA has today published its safety surveillance strategy for
monitoring the safety of all UK-approved COVID-19 vaccines. This
has been informed by the Government’s independent advisory body,
the Commission on Human Medicines, and expertise across the UK
public health sector.
The MHRA has also published today the first of what will be
regular COVID-19 vaccine safety reports. These provide details on
the suspected side-effects to the vaccines reported through its
safety monitoring system, the Yellow Card scheme. This data has
been thoroughly analysed by the MHRA’s scientists and safety
experts together with all other sources of evidence.
The MHRA is working to actively promote reporting on COVID-19
vaccines from patients and healthcare professionals to the
Coronavirus Yellow Card
scheme. Anyone who has received the vaccine and thinks they
may have suffered a side-effect, even suspected, is encouraged to
report it to the MHRA at: coronavirus-yellowcard.mhra.gov.uk.
Safety monitoring of all medicines and vaccines used by the wider
UK population is a key role of the MHRA. The safety of COVID-19
vaccines is continually monitored throughout their use in
healthcare practice to ensure they remain safe and effective. The
regulator does this by identifying and comparing new and emerging
data from multiple sources with what it already knows from
large-scale clinical trials.
Dr June Raine, MHRA Chief Executive, said:
Vaccines are the most effective way to protect against COVID-19
and save lives and prevent serious complications from this
terrible virus.
The data we have collected provides further reassurance that
the COVID-19 vaccines are safe and continue to meet the
rigorous regulatory standards required for all vaccines. We
remain confident that the benefits of these vaccines outweigh
any risks.
Our priority is to ensure the public have safe and effective
vaccines and we will continue to analyse, monitor and review
all the safety data for these vaccines.
I’d like to thank everyone who has reported a potential side
effect to us - every report matters.
END
Notes to Editors
- Anyone can use the Yellow Card scheme to report suspected
side effects of medicines, and incidents involving medical
devices, and defective or fake medical products.
- Reports can be made on the Yellow Card reporting site,
via the mobile app from the Google Play Store or
Apple App Store, via
freephone (0800 731 6789, 9am to 5pm Monday to Friday) or by
reporting an issue to their healthcare team who can file a
report on their behalf. Patients are also advised to contact a
healthcare professional if they are worried about their health.
- The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (‘the
agency’) has three centres. The MHRA, the National Institute for
Biological Standards and Control (NIBSC) and the Clinical Practice Research
Datalink (CPRD). The agency is an executive agency of the
Department of Health and Social Care.
-
The Commission on Human
Medicines (CHM) advises ministers and the MHRA on the
safety, efficacy and quality of medicinal products. The CHM is
an advisory non-departmental public body, sponsored by the
Department of Health and
Social Care.
- The MHRA has statutory responsibility for continuous safety
monitoring (pharmacovigilance) following vaccine approval, and in
ensuring the balance of benefits and risks remains favourable.
- Public Health England (PHE) has responsibility for
surveillance of the immunisation programme including vaccine
coverage, the impact on disease and seroprevalence at a
population level, monitoring vaccine failures and monitoring
attitudes to vaccination.
- The MHRA and PHE work independently from each other, but
often collaborate on scientific methods and standards for safety
surveillance.