Author: Pramanick, Angsumita; Kanneganti, Abhiram; Wong, Jing Lin Jeslyn; Li, Sarah Weiling; Dimri, Pooja Sharma; Mahyuddin, Aniza Puteri; Kumar, Sailesh; Illanes, Sebastian Enrique; Chan, Jerry Kok Yen; Su, Lin Lin; Biswas, Arijit; Tambyah, Paul Anantharajah; Huang, Ruby Yunâ€Ju; Mattar, Citra Nurfarah Zaini; Choolani, Mahesh
Title: A reasoned approach towards administering COVIDâ€19 vaccines to pregnant women Cord-id: gbl54s0a Document date: 2021_6_30
ID: gbl54s0a
Snippet: There are over 50 SARSâ€CoVâ€2 candidate vaccines undergoing Phase II and III clinical trials. Several vaccines have been approved by regulatory authorities and rolled out for use in different countries. Due to concerns of potential teratogenicity or adverse effect on maternal physiology, pregnancy has been a specific exclusion criterion for most vaccine trials with only two trials not excluding pregnant women. Thus, other than limited animal studies, gradually emerging development and reprodu
Document: There are over 50 SARSâ€CoVâ€2 candidate vaccines undergoing Phase II and III clinical trials. Several vaccines have been approved by regulatory authorities and rolled out for use in different countries. Due to concerns of potential teratogenicity or adverse effect on maternal physiology, pregnancy has been a specific exclusion criterion for most vaccine trials with only two trials not excluding pregnant women. Thus, other than limited animal studies, gradually emerging development and reproductive toxicity data, and observational data from vaccine registries, there is a paucity of reliable information to guide recommendations for the safe vaccination of pregnant women. Pregnancy is a risk factor for severe COVIDâ€19, especially in women with comorbidities, resulting in increased rates of preterm birth and maternal morbidity. We discuss the major SARSâ€CoVâ€2 vaccines, their mechanisms of action, efficacy, safety profile and possible benefits to the maternalâ€fetal dyad to create a rational approach towards maternal vaccination while anticipating and mitigating vaccineâ€related complications. Pregnant women with high exposure risks or coâ€morbidities predisposing to severe COVIDâ€19 infection should be prioritised for vaccination. Those with risk factors for adverse effects should be counselled accordingly. It is essential to support patient autonomy by shared decisionâ€making involving a riskâ€benefit discussion with the pregnant woman.
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