Why COVID vaccine safety needs scrutiny
- May 26, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Why COVID vaccine safety needs scrutiny
Sub: Science and tech
Sec: Health
Context:
- The Indian Council for Medical Research (ICMR) issued a letter to the researchers of Banaras Hindu University last week, countering their study on the side effects of India’s indigenous vaccine for COVID — Covaxin.
What did the BHU study conclude?
- Adolescent girls and those with comorbidities were at a higher risk of adverse events after receiving Bharat Biotech’s BBV152 (Covaxin) vaccine against COVID-19.
- A third of the participants reported adverse events of special interest (AESI).
- Findings from a one-year prospective study in North India’, also said that serious adverse events occurred in 1% of BBV152 recipients, and that extended surveillance is warranted following the vaccine administration.
- Viral upper respiratory tract infections were reported in 47.9% adolescents and 42.6% adults, as per the study.
- Menstrual abnormalities were noticed in 4.6% of female participants.
- Ocular abnormalities and hypothyroidism were observed in 2.7% and 0.6% of the participants, respectively.
- Among the serious AESIs (1%), stroke and Guillain-Barre syndrome were identified in 0.3% and 0.1% of the participants, respectively.
What is the ICMR stance?
- With reference to the study itself, ICMR claimed there were critical flaws:
- the study had no control arm of unvaccinated individuals for comparison with the vaccinated group, and therefore,
- the reported events in the study cannot be linked or attributed to COVID-19 vaccination;
- it did not provide background rates of patterns observed in the general population, and
- thereby made it impossible to study the observed events in the post vaccination period.
What was the fallout?
- Multiple accounts of doctors and researchers on social media also pointed out that the ICMR developed the vaccine along with the company, and not declaring its vested interest was also a serious lapse in research terms.
About COVAXIN:
- COVAXIN is an inactivated vaccine, created from a strain of the infectious SARS-CoV-2 virus, that has shown promise in preclinical studies, demonstrating extensive safety and effective immune responses.
- COVAXIN has been developed by Bharat Biotech in collaboration with the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) and the National Institute of Virology (NIV).
- The SARS-CoV-2 strain was isolated in NIV, Pune and transferred to Bharat Biotech.
- It is an inactivated vaccine that is made by using particles of the Covid-19 virus that were killed, making them unable to infect or replicate.
- Injecting particular doses of these particles serves to build immunity by helping the body create antibodies against the dead virus.
- Bharat Biotech’s track record in developing Vero cell culture platform technologies has been proven in several vaccines for polio, rabies, rotavirus, Japanese Encephalitis, Chikungunya and Zika.