Toronto Star

Alberta confirms clot after vaccine dose

Case is second in Canada linked to AstraZenec­a

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

Alberta has confirmed the country’s second rare blood clot case in a patient who received the Oxford-AstraZenec­a vaccine, the province’s chief medical health officer announced Saturday.

Dr. Deena Hinshaw said the male patient, who is in his 60s and recovering, marks the second Canadian case of the blood clot disorder known as vaccineind­uced immune thrombotic thrombocyt­openia, or VITT.

The diagnosis does not change the province’s risk assessment of the vaccine, she said, adding that she is taking the event “extremely seriously.”

“These blood clots remain extremely rare, and anyone who is aged 55 and older faces much higher risks from COVID-19 infection than from this vaccine,” Hinshaw told reporters on a conference call.

She continued to recommend AstraZenec­a for anyone 55 and older, saying it is the best way to protect their health.

“I know that reports of any adverse events can be scary, especially when it involves a new vaccine,” she said. “If I were in this age category I would get this vaccine.”

More than 700,000 doses of AstraZenec­a have been administer­ed across Canada to date.

The global frequency of VITT has been estimated at about one case in 100,000 to 250,000 doses. In a stark comparison, Albertans 55 and older who are diagnosed with COVID-19 have a one in 200 chance of dying from that infection, Hinshaw said.

In Europe, only a few dozen cases of the rare blood clots following inoculatio­n have been reported compared to the millions vaccinated with AstraZenec­a. Most of those cases have occurred within 14 days of the shot, and the majority were in women under 55.

“It’s not that there’s no risk of this outcome in those who are over 55 or that there’s no risk in men, but rather that it is still such a very rare risk,” Hinshaw said.

A Quebec woman was the first in Canada to develop a blood clot after being vaccinated with AstraZenec­a.

The woman received the vaccine produced at the Serum Institute of India, known as Covishield, and was recovering at home, the Public Health Agency of Canada said Tuesday.

A decision around a broader age range in which it is deemed safe to receive AstraZenec­a shots is coming in the “near future,” Hinshaw said.

More than 2,000 patients were in Ontario’s hospitals due to the novel coronaviru­s for the first time since the onset of the year-long pandemic. Of the 2,065 patients receiving treatment, the province said 726 were in intensive care and 501 were on a ventilator.

Ontario logged 4,362 new COVID-19 infections on Saturday, down from the single-day peak of 4,812 recorded a day earlier.

Quebec’s case count climbed by 1,537 on Saturday.

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