Clothier Hazel J, Crawford Nigel W, Russell Melissa, Kelly Heath, Buttery Jim P
SAEFVIC, Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Drug Saf. 2017 Jun;40(6):483-495. doi: 10.1007/s40264-017-0520-7.
Australia is traditionally an early adopter of vaccines, therefore comprehensive and effective post-licensure vaccine pharmacovigilance is critical to maintain confidence in immunisation, both nationally and internationally. With adverse event following immunisation (AEFI) surveillance the responsibility of Australian jurisdictions, Victoria operates an enhanced passive AEFI surveillance system integrated with clinical services, called 'SAEFVIC' (Surveillance of Adverse Events Following Vaccination In the Community).
The aim of this study was to evaluate Victoria's current AEFI surveillance system 'SAEFVIC' and inform ongoing quality improvement of vaccine pharmacovigilance in Victoria and Australia.
We conducted a retrospective structured desktop evaluation of AEFI reporting received by SAEFVIC from 2007 to 2014, to evaluate the system according to its stated objectives, i.e. to improve AEFI reporting; provide AEFI signal detection; and to maintain consumer confidence in vaccination.
AEFI reporting has tripled since SAEFVIC commenced (incidence risk ratio [IRR] 3.04, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.35-3.93), raising Victoria to be the lead jurisdiction by AEFI reporting volume and to rank third by population reporting rate nationally. The largest increase was observed in children. Data were utilised to investigate potential signal events and inform vaccine policy. Signal detection required clinical suspicion by surveillance nurses, or prior vaccine-specific concerns. Subsequent vaccination post-AEFI was documented for 56.2% (95% CI 54.1-58.4) of reports, and the proportion of children due or overdue for vaccination was 2.3% higher for those reporting AEFI compared with the general population.
SAEFVIC has improved AEFI surveillance, facilitates signal investigation and validation, and supports consumer confidence in immunisation. Expansion of the system nationally has the potential to improve capacity and capability of vaccine pharmacovigilance, particularly through data consistency and jurisdictional comparability in Australia.
澳大利亚传统上是疫苗的早期采用者,因此全面有效的疫苗上市后药物警戒对于在国内和国际上维持对免疫接种的信心至关重要。由于免疫接种后不良事件(AEFI)监测由澳大利亚各司法管辖区负责,维多利亚州运行了一个与临床服务相结合的强化被动AEFI监测系统,称为“SAEFVIC”(社区疫苗接种后不良事件监测)。
本研究的目的是评估维多利亚州目前的AEFI监测系统“SAEFVIC”,并为维多利亚州和澳大利亚正在进行的疫苗药物警戒质量改进提供信息。
我们对SAEFVIC在2007年至2014年期间收到的AEFI报告进行了回顾性结构化桌面评估,以根据其既定目标评估该系统,即改善AEFI报告;提供AEFI信号检测;并维持消费者对疫苗接种的信心。
自SAEFVIC启动以来,AEFI报告增加了两倍(发病率风险比[IRR]3.04,95%置信区间[CI]2.35 - 3.93),使维多利亚州成为AEFI报告量领先的司法管辖区,在全国人口报告率方面排名第三。儿童中的增长最为显著。数据被用于调查潜在的信号事件并为疫苗政策提供信息。信号检测需要监测护士的临床怀疑或先前特定疫苗的担忧。在56.2%(95%CI 54.1 - 58.4)的报告中记录了AEFI后的后续疫苗接种情况,报告AEFI的儿童中应接种或逾期接种疫苗的比例比普通人群高2.3%。
SAEFVIC改善了AEFI监测,促进了信号调查和验证,并支持了消费者对免疫接种的信心。在全国范围内扩展该系统有可能提高疫苗药物警戒的能力和水平,特别是通过澳大利亚的数据一致性和司法管辖区可比性。