• J Travel Med · Nov 2023

    Enhanced safety surveillance of STAMARIL® yellow fever vaccine provided under the expanded access investigational new drug program in the United States.

    • Andrey Rojas, Wayne Hachey, Gurpreet Kaur, Joanna Korejwo, and Riyadh Muhammad.
    • Global Pharmacovigilance Department, Sanofi, Bogota, Colombia.
    • J Travel Med. 2023 Nov 18; 30 (7).

    BackgroundYF-VAX® (Sanofi, Swiftwater, PA), a live, attenuated vaccine based on the yellow fever (YF) substrain 17D-204, is the only YF vaccine licensed in the USA. Manufacturing disruption of YF-VAX and anticipated depletion of the US supply by mid-2017 led to the importation of another YF vaccine, STAMARIL® (Sanofi, France), into the USA under an expanded access investigational new drug program (EAP) to fulfil the public health need for YF vaccination. As part of this program, Sanofi collected enhanced safety surveillance data following vaccination with STAMARIL. Here, we report the results of the enhanced safety surveillance.MethodsSTAMARIL vaccine was offered to those aged ≥9 months at high risk of YF. Vaccine recipients (or parents/guardians) were instructed to report suspected adverse reactions, any serious adverse events (SAEs) including adverse events of special interest [AESI] occurring after vaccination regardless of suspected relationship, and any inadvertent exposure in pregnancy or breastfeeding within 14 days of vaccination. The AESIs monitored were anaphylaxis, neurotropic disease (YEL-AND) and viscerotropic disease (YEL-AVD).ResultsOverall, 627 079 individuals received STAMARIL from May 2017 through June 2021; of these, 1308 (0.2%) reported at least one AE, of which 122 reported at least one SAE. There were seven cases of YEL-AND and three cases of YEL-AVD reported, for reporting rates of 1.1 and 0.5 per 100 000 vaccine recipients, respectively. One vaccine recipient developed an anaphylactic reaction (reporting rate: 0.16 per 100 000). No safety concerns were identified from inadvertent vaccine exposure during pregnancy (41 pregnant women) or potential neonatal exposure via breast milk (four exposed infants).ConclusionsThis study supports the utility of STAMARIL in the EAP as an alternative solution for the YF vaccine shortage in the USA. SAEs were very rare and consistent with the known safety profile of STAMARIL.© International Society of Travel Medicine 2023. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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