Paediatrics (RCH) - Research Publications

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    Myocarditis and myopericarditis cases following COVID-19 mRNA vaccines administered to 12-17-year olds in Victoria, Australia
    Cheng, DR ; Clothier, HJ ; Morgan, HJ ; Roney, E ; Shenton, P ; Cox, N ; Jones, BO ; Schrader, S ; Crawford, NW ; Buttery, JP (BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP, 2022-06)
    IMPORTANCE: COVID-19 mRNA vaccine-associated myocarditis has previously been described; however specific features in the adolescent population are currently not well understood. OBJECTIVE: To describe myocarditis adverse events following immunisation reported following any COVID-19 mRNA vaccines in the adolescent population in Victoria, Australia. DESIGN: Statewide, population-based study. SETTING: Surveillance of Adverse Events Following Vaccination in the Community (SAEFVIC) is the vaccine-safety service for Victoria, Australia. PARTICIPANTS: All SAEFVIC reports of myocarditis and myopericarditis in 12-17-year-old COVID-19 mRNA vaccinees submitted between 22 February 2021 and 22 February 2022, as well as accompanying diagnostic investigation results where available, were assessed using Brighton Collaboration criteria for diagnostic certainty. EXPOSURES: Any mRNA COVID-19 vaccine. MAIN OUTCOMES/MMEASURE: Confirmed myocarditis as per Brighton Collaboration criteria (levels 1-3). RESULTS: Clinical review demonstrated definitive (Brighton level 1) or probable (level 2) diagnoses in 75 cases. Confirmed myocarditis reporting rates were 8.3 per 100 000 doses in this age group. Cases were predominantly male (n=62, 82.7%) and post dose 2 (n=61, 81.3%). Rates peaked in the 16-17-year-old age group and were higher in males than females (17.7 vs 3.9 per 100 000, p=<0.001).The most common presenting symptoms were chest pain, dyspnoea and palpitations. A large majority of cases who had a cardiac MRI had abnormalities (n=33, 91.7%). Females were more likely to have ongoing clinical symptoms at 1-month follow-up (p=0.02). CONCLUSION: Accurate evaluation and confirmation of episodes of COVID-19 mRNA vaccine-associated myocarditis enabled understanding of clinical phenotypes in the adolescent age group. Any potential vaccination and safety surveillance policies needs to consider age and gender differences.
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    Victorian Specialist Immunisation Services (VicSIS) - bolstering adult clinics for COVID-19 vaccines
    Gordon, SF ; Virah Sawmy, E ; Duckworth, E ; Wolthuizen, M ; Clothier, HJ ; Chea, M ; Tenneti, N ; Blow, N ; Buttery, JP ; de Luca, J ; Korman, TM ; Barnes, S ; Slade, C ; Maggs, C ; Giles, ML ; Teh, BW ; Aboltins, C ; Langan, KM ; Van Diemen, A ; Crawford, NW (TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC, 2022-11-30)
    The Victorian Specialist Immunization Services (VicSIS) was established in Victoria, Australia, in February 2021, aiming to enhance vaccine safety services for Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccines. VicSIS supports practitioners and patients with complex vaccine safety questions, including those who experience adverse events following immunization (AEFI) after COVID-19 vaccines. VicSIS provides individual vaccination recommendations, allergy testing, vaccine challenges, and vaccination under supervision. VicSIS initially comprised of eight adult COVID-19 specialist vaccination clinics, subsequently, expanding to better support pediatric patients as the Australian vaccine roll-out extended to adolescents and children. Since their establishment to September 2021, the inaugural VicSIS clinics received a total of 26,401 referrals and reviewed 6,079 patients. Consults were initially predominantly for pre-vaccination reviews, later predominantly becoming post-vaccination AEFI reviews as the program progressed. Regardless of the type of consult, the most common consult outcome was a recommendation for routine vaccination (73% and 55% of consult outcomes respectively). VicSIS is an integral component of the COVID-19 vaccination program and supports confidence in COVID-19 vaccine safety by providing consistent advice across the state. VicSIS aims to strengthen the health system through the pandemic, bolstering specialist immunization services beyond COVID-19 vaccines, including training the next generation of vaccinology experts.