1. Post-Marketing Safety Surveillance for the Adjuvanted Recombinant Zoster Vaccine: Methodology
- Author
-
Tavares-Da-Silva, Fernanda, Mahaux, Olivia, Van Holle, Lionel, Haguinet, François, Seifert, Harry, and Stegmann, Jens-Ulrich
- Subjects
Canada ,Advisory committee ,Context (language use) ,Leading Article ,Toxicology ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Pharmacovigilance ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Germany ,Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems ,Herpes Zoster Vaccine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Safety monitoring ,Pharmacology ,Vaccines, Synthetic ,Safety surveillance ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Vaccine introduction ,United States ,Manufacturing data ,Aggregate data ,Zoster vaccine ,Medical emergency ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A diligent, systematic, regular review of aggregate safety data is essential, particularly early after vaccine introduction, as this is when safety signals not identified during clinical development may emerge. In October 2017, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommended the adjuvanted recombinant zoster vaccine (RZV; Shingrix, GSK) as the preferred vaccine for preventing herpes zoster (HZ) and related complications in immunocompetent adults aged ≥ 50 years. Subsequently, GSK experienced an unprecedented high demand for RZV. In this methodology paper, we summarize the enhanced measures undertaken to assess RZV safety during its early post-marketing experience in the USA, Canada and Germany. In addition to the routine signal-detection methods already in place for all vaccines, GSK established tailored and enhanced safety monitoring for RZV based on aggregate data of spontaneous reports and manufacturing data. Proactive, near real-time detection and evaluation of signals was a key objective. A dedicated in-house signal-detection tool customized for RZV was employed on a weekly (rather than the routine monthly) basis, allowing for a centralized, more frequent review of data on a single web-based platform. We also identified the background incidence rates of preselected medical events of interest in the first countries to introduce RZV (USA, Canada and Germany) to perform observed-to-expected analyses. This approach may offer a solution to the challenges associated with the assessment and monitoring of vaccine safety in an efficient and timely manner in the context of high vaccine uptake. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1007/s40264-020-00989-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2020