Springfield News-Sun

CDC: Vaccines pose no serious risks in pregnancy

- Emily Anthes

In an early analysis of coro- navirus vaccine safety data, researcher­s at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have found no evidence that the Pfizer-bionTech or Moderna vaccines pose serious risks during pregnancy.

The findings are preliminar­y and cover just the first 11 weeks of the U.S. vaccina- tion program. But the study, which included self-reported data on more than 35,000 people who received one of the vaccines during or shortly before pregnancy, is the largest yet on the safety of the coronaviru­s vaccines in pregnant people.

During the clinical trials of the vaccines, pregnant women were excluded. That left patients, doctors and experts unsure whether the shots were safe to administer during pregnancy.

“There’s a lot of anxiety about whether it’s safe and whether it would work and what to expect as far as side effects,” said Dr. Stephanie Gaw, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at the University of California, San Francisco.

The new data, Gaw said, demonstrat­e that “a lot of pregnant people are getting the vaccine, there isn’t a sig- nificant increase in adverse pregnancy effects at this point, and that side effect profiles are very similar to nonpregnan­t people.”

“I think that’s all very reas- suring,” she said, “and I think it will really help providers and public health officials more strongly recommend getting the vaccine in preg- nancy.”

COVID-19 poses serious risks during pregnancy. Preg- nant women who develop symptoms of the disease are more likely to become seriously ill, and more likely

Rates of miscarriag­e, prematurit­y, low birth weight and birth defects were consistent with those reported in pregnant women before the pandemic, the researcher­s report.

to die, than nonpregnan­t women with symptoms.

Because of those risks, the CDC has recommende­d that coronaviru­s vaccines be made available to pregnant women, though it also suggests that they consult with their doctors when making a decision about vaccinatio­n.

The new study, which was published on Wednesday in The New England Journal of Medicine, is based largely on self-reported data from V-safe, the CDC’S coronaviru­s vaccine safety monitoring system. Participan­ts in the program use a smartphone app to complete regular surveys about their health, and any side effects they might be experienci­ng, after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine.

The researcher­s analyzed the side effects reported by V-safe participan­ts who received either the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine between Dec. 14, 2020, and Feb. 28, 2021. They focused on 35,691 participan­ts who said that they had been pregnant when they received the vaccine or became pregnant shortly thereafter.

After vaccinatio­n, preg- nant participan­ts reported the same general pattern of side effects that nonpregnan­t ones did, the researcher­s found: pain at the injection site, fatigue, headaches and muscle pain.

Women who were pregnant were slightly more likely to report injection site pain than women who were not, but less likely to report the other side effects. They were also slightly more likely to report nausea or vomiting after the second dose.

Pregnant V-safe participan­ts were also given an opportunit­y to enroll in a special registry that tracked pregnancy and infant outcomes.

By the end of February, 827 of those enrolled in the pregnancy registry had completed their pregnancie­s, 86% of which resulted in a live birth. Rates of miscarriag­e, prematurit­y, low birth weight and birth defects were consistent with those reported in pregnant women before the pandemic, the researcher­s report.

“This study is of critical importance to pregnant individual­s,” Dr. Michal Elovitz, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, said in an email. “It is very reassuring that there were no reported acute events in pregnant individual­s” over the course of the study, she said.

But the report has several limitation­s and much more research is needed, experts said. Enrollment in the surveillan­ce programs is voluntary and the data are self-reported.

In addition, because the study period encompasse­d just the first few months of the U.S. vaccinatio­n campaign, the vast majority of those enrolled in the pregnancy registry were health care workers. And there is not yet any data on pregnancy outcomes from people who were vaccinated during the first trimester of pregnancy.

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