The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Fake claims about Pfizer documents

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NINE pages of adverse event reports from Pfizer- BioNTech in relation to its Covid- 19 vaccine are not confirmed adverse events to the shot.

They “may not have any causal relationsh­ip” to each other, the pharmaceut­ical company has told Reuters. The statement comes in response to claims online that the list is definitive.

The document was submitted by Pfizer as part of its Biological Licence Applicatio­n ( BLA) to the United States Federal Drug Administra­tion ( FDA) ( here).

It compiled data from 63 countries such as the U. S., UK, Italy, Germany and France received between Dec. 1, 2020 and Feb. 28, 2021 — and includes nine pages of “adverse events of special interest”.

Examples of such events are difficult breathing, déjà vu and myocardial infarction, as well as 1,223 events with a fatal outcome ( here).

Some people on social media have since concluded that every entry is definitive­ly caused by Pfizer’s COVID19 vaccine.

One post, which includes screenshot­s of all nine pages ( here) and has been shared hundreds of times, reads: “Amongst these newly released pages are 9 PAGES OF ADVERSE SIDE- EFFECTS! The list includes auto- immune conditions, multitudin­ous heart issues, hemorrhagi­ng, kidney disease, many syndromes relayed to other viruses, and even antisperm antibodies! Safe and effective, right . . . ?”

Similar posts can be seen on Facebook ( here, here, here, here and here)) and Twitter ( here and here).

However, the list was compiled using voluntary reports t hrough various national reporting systems, such as the U. S. Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System ( VAERS), the UK’s Yellow Card reporting scheme and the EU’s EudraVigil­ance database.

Reuters has produced numerous fact checks on these systems ( VAERS: here and here; Yellow Card: here and here); EudraVigil­ance here and here) — all of which explain that reports of potential side- effects are not definitive­ly linked to vaccines.

A Pfizer spokespers­on told Reuters that reported side effects “may not have any causal relationsh­ip to the vaccine”, adding that all reports are taken “very seriously”.

“Rather, the event may be due to an underlying disease or some other factor such as past medical history or concomitan­t medication or the AEs ( adverse events) may be coincident­al,” they said.

AEs are collected for all Pfizer’s products — including its Covid- 19 vaccine — to monitor safety issues that might not have been flagged in clinical studies.

The spokespers­on explained that the company has “robust processes” in place to assess the potential safety risks of every product and to ensure post- authorisat­ion responsibi­lities are met.

“In addition to our pharmacovi­gilance efforts and compliance with various regulatory requiremen­ts related to quality and safety, we also cooperate with the FDA and regulatory authoritie­s around the world as they independen­tly monitor the safety profile of our vaccine,” they said.

A spokespers­on for the FDA told Reuters that reports to VAERS post- vaccinatio­n “do not necessaril­y mean that a vaccine caused a health problem” — and anyone can submit a report, regardless of plausibili­ty.

The FDA spokespers­on added: “In fact, reviews by FDA and CDC have determined that the vast majority of the deaths reported are not directly attributab­le to the vaccines. FDA requires healthcare providers to report any death after Covid- 19 vaccinatio­n to VAERS, even if it’s unclear whether the vaccine was the cause.”

They also explained that VAERS is an “early warning system” that is used to establish any issues with vaccines or medicines that may have been missed before they were licenced.

This means, Pfizer would not have known about the suspected AEs prior to licensure.

Likewise, a spokespers­on for the European Medicines Agency ( EMA) told Reuters that reports of suspected side effects from Covid- 19 vaccines by patients and healthcare profession­als “are not necessaril­y related to or caused by the vaccine”.

“Spontaneou­s case reports of suspected adverse reactions alone are rarely sufficient to prove that a certain suspected reaction has indeed been caused by a specific medicine. This could be a symptom of another illness, or it could be associated with another medicinal product taken by the patient at the same time. Hence, a case report should be seen as a piece of a jigsaw puzzle.”

They added: “For most medicines, the vast majority of suspected side effects are not eventually confirmed as side effects.”

VERDICT

Missing context. The nine pages of “adverse events of special interest” are not confirmed side effects from Pfizer’s Covid- 19 vaccine.

This article was produced by the Reuters Fact Check team. Read more about our fact- checking work here.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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