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Standardizing case definitions for monitoring the safety of maternal vaccines globally: GAIA definitions, a review of progress to date

Standardizing case definitions for monitoring the safety of maternal vaccines globally: GAIA definitions, a review of progress to date
Standardizing case definitions for monitoring the safety of maternal vaccines globally: GAIA definitions, a review of progress to date

In 2014, the Global Alignment on Immunization safety Assessment in pregnancy consortium (GAIA) was formed, with the goal of developing a harmonized, globally-concerted approach to actively monitor the safety of vaccines in pregnancy. A total of 26 standardized definitions for the classification of adverse events have been developed. The aim of this review was to identify and describe studies undertaken to assess the performance of these definitions. A literature search was undertaken to identify published studies assessing the performance of the definitions, and reference lists were snowballed. Data were abstracted by two investigators and a narrative review of the results is presented. Four studies that have evaluated 13 GAIA case definitions (50%) were identified. Five case definitions have been assessed in high-income settings only. Recommendations have been made by the investigators to improve the performance of the definitions. These include ensuring consistency across definitions, removal of the potential for ambiguity or variations in interpretation and ensuring that higher-level criteria are acceptable at lower levels of confidence. Future research should prioritize the key case definitions that have not been assessed in low- and middle-income settings, as well as the 13 that have not undergone any validation.

adverse events, maternal vaccination, neonatal infections, pharmacovigilance, pregnancy, vaccine safety
0020-7292
29-38
Davies, Hannah G.
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Bowman, Conor
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Watson, Gabriella
a6823cd1-f4b1-4aba-85d0-15848812ab41
Dodd, Caitlin
52f26d3d-3138-4255-9700-a19d29688038
Jones, Christine E.
48229079-8b58-4dcb-8374-d9481fe7b426
Munoz, Flor M.
d8ddc17d-9fc7-4f2a-8ddf-7d09d4703c06
Heath, Paul T.
c1874f54-5279-4438-99f2-a0ca9ded7800
Cutland, Clare L.
c2803201-f0d9-49fa-9a64-f26fd969804d
Le Doare, Kirsty
9424dc5c-4484-41d3-86dd-29cfaffb43f5
Davies, Hannah G.
6ccfcb48-f504-4683-a621-faba9cd107ec
Bowman, Conor
6bd9d355-fc8c-4122-afd6-f75a93670104
Watson, Gabriella
a6823cd1-f4b1-4aba-85d0-15848812ab41
Dodd, Caitlin
52f26d3d-3138-4255-9700-a19d29688038
Jones, Christine E.
48229079-8b58-4dcb-8374-d9481fe7b426
Munoz, Flor M.
d8ddc17d-9fc7-4f2a-8ddf-7d09d4703c06
Heath, Paul T.
c1874f54-5279-4438-99f2-a0ca9ded7800
Cutland, Clare L.
c2803201-f0d9-49fa-9a64-f26fd969804d
Le Doare, Kirsty
9424dc5c-4484-41d3-86dd-29cfaffb43f5

Davies, Hannah G., Bowman, Conor, Watson, Gabriella, Dodd, Caitlin, Jones, Christine E., Munoz, Flor M., Heath, Paul T., Cutland, Clare L. and Le Doare, Kirsty (2023) Standardizing case definitions for monitoring the safety of maternal vaccines globally: GAIA definitions, a review of progress to date. International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 162 (1), 29-38. (doi:10.1002/ijgo.14843).

Record type: Review

Abstract

In 2014, the Global Alignment on Immunization safety Assessment in pregnancy consortium (GAIA) was formed, with the goal of developing a harmonized, globally-concerted approach to actively monitor the safety of vaccines in pregnancy. A total of 26 standardized definitions for the classification of adverse events have been developed. The aim of this review was to identify and describe studies undertaken to assess the performance of these definitions. A literature search was undertaken to identify published studies assessing the performance of the definitions, and reference lists were snowballed. Data were abstracted by two investigators and a narrative review of the results is presented. Four studies that have evaluated 13 GAIA case definitions (50%) were identified. Five case definitions have been assessed in high-income settings only. Recommendations have been made by the investigators to improve the performance of the definitions. These include ensuring consistency across definitions, removal of the potential for ambiguity or variations in interpretation and ensuring that higher-level criteria are acceptable at lower levels of confidence. Future research should prioritize the key case definitions that have not been assessed in low- and middle-income settings, as well as the 13 that have not undergone any validation.

Text
Intl J Gynecology Obste - 2023 - Davies - Standardizing case definitions for monitoring the safety of maternal vaccines - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 25 April 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 May 2023
Published date: July 2023
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Authors. International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics.
Keywords: adverse events, maternal vaccination, neonatal infections, pharmacovigilance, pregnancy, vaccine safety

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 477484
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477484
ISSN: 0020-7292
PURE UUID: aeceab64-3d3c-4e5b-81b7-b767a0635e40
ORCID for Christine E. Jones: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1523-2368

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Date deposited: 07 Jun 2023 16:43
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:45

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Contributors

Author: Hannah G. Davies
Author: Conor Bowman
Author: Gabriella Watson
Author: Caitlin Dodd
Author: Flor M. Munoz
Author: Paul T. Heath
Author: Clare L. Cutland
Author: Kirsty Le Doare

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