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Active Surveillance for COVID-19 Vaccine Safety Using Sequential Analysis in Korea: Population-Based Retrospective Observational Study

Na-Young Jeong et al · JMIR Publications · 2026

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Abstract BackgroundWith the advent of new vaccines, including the COVID-19 vaccines introduced during the recent pandemic, the need for near real-time active surveillance has increased to support timely regulatory decision-making. ObjectiveThis study aimed to assess the feasibility of sequential monitoring for potential adverse events following immunization in Korea, focusing on COVID-19 vaccines. MethodsThis population-based study used a linked database that combined the COVID-19 registry with national health insurance claims data. Participants included individuals older than 12 years who received either monovalent or bivalent COVID-19 vaccines in Korea between February 2021 and March 2023. Monthly retrospective sequential testing was performed for 3 prespecified outcomes (acute myocardial infarction, myocarditis, and anaphylaxis) as well as a negative control event (colonic diverticulitis). A Poisson-based maximized sequential probability ratio test was applied to compare postvaccination incidence rates with historical background rates, accounting for multiple testing and claims processing delays. Analyses were stratified by age group, vaccine platform, and dose. ResultsThis study included over 43 million monovalent and 6.3 million bivalent vaccine recipients. Sequential analyses identified statistical signals for myocarditis following mRNA vaccines in individuals aged 12 to 64 years and protein subunit vaccines in those aged 40 to 64 years. Signals for anaphylaxis were observed following mRNA and nonreplicating viral vector vaccines in individuals older than 18 years. No safety signals were identified for acute myocardial infarction or colonic diverticulitis. Sequential monitoring detected signals for myocarditis and anaphylaxis before regulatory authorities took safety actions, with the earliest signals observed on September 30, 2021, and April 30, 2021, respectively. ConclusionsNear real-time sequential testing detected statistical safety signals for myocarditis and anaphylaxis following COVID-19 vaccination. These signals were recognized by the regulatory authority as being associated with the vaccines, demonstrating the potential of this approach to detect signals requiring further causality assessments, particularly for newly introduced vaccines at an early stage.

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APA 7

al, N. Y. J. E. (2026). Active Surveillance for COVID-19 Vaccine Safety Using Sequential Analysis in Korea: Population-Based Retrospective Observational Study. https://doi.org/10.2196/75094

MLA

al, Na-Young Jeong et. "Active Surveillance for COVID-19 Vaccine Safety Using Sequential Analysis in Korea: Population-Based Retrospective Observational Study." 2026. https://doi.org/10.2196/75094.

Chicago

al, Na-Young Jeong et. 2026. "Active Surveillance for COVID-19 Vaccine Safety Using Sequential Analysis in Korea: Population-Based Retrospective Observational Study.". https://doi.org/10.2196/75094.

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al, N. Y. J. E. 2026, Active Surveillance for COVID-19 Vaccine Safety Using Sequential Analysis in Korea: Population-Based Retrospective Observational Study, JMIR Publications, available at: https://doi.org/10.2196/75094 [Accessed 29 Jun. 2026].

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Título
Active Surveillance for COVID-19 Vaccine Safety Using Sequential Analysis in Korea: Population-Based Retrospective Observational Study
Autor / colaboradores
Na-Young Jeong et al
Editorial
JMIR Publications
Año de publicación
2026
ISSN
2369-2960
ISSN
2369-2960
Idioma
eng
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