- A rare blood clot with low blood platelets (thrombosis and thrombocytopenia) in the recipients has been a major safety concern with AstraZeneca vaccine, particularly, in Europe, where the AstraZeneca vaccine is widely used.
- The clotting incident has been reported at an extremely rare rate (about one in 100,000 recipients).
- Germany has reported cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT), an unusual type of stroke that is characteristic of thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome, in roughly one in 76,000 recipients of the vaccine. The rate was higher in Norway and Denmark, where roughly one in every 40,000 AstraZeneca vaccine recipients developed CVT, with the frequency of other clotting events possibly even higher.
- Vaccinated people and health-care providers should be aware of blood-clot symptoms, such as shortness of breath, chest pain, leg swelling and persistent abdominal pain, to ensure prompt treatment.
- Recent studies identified specific antibodies to platelet factor 4 that led to clots in the patients.
- The European Medicines Agency (EMA) has concluded that the Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine should carry a warning that blood clots, accompanied by low levels of blood platelets, are very rare side effects of the vaccine.
- EMA along with the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (UK) have stated that the benefits of vaccine still greatly outweighed the risks.
- Currently, Germany, the Netherlands, the Philippines, Portugal and Spain have recommended vaccination of this vaccine only to people over 60. Canada and France have limited it to those over 55; Australia, over 50; Belgium, over 56. Regulators in France and Germany have recommended that people under 55 who have had one dose get a different vaccine for their second shot. Britain would begin offering alternative shots to people under 30.
- Norway and Denmark have recommended against using the vaccine at all for now.
Weighing risks and benefits of Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine
The benefits of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine—in hospitalizations and deaths prevented—far outweigh the risks of a rare clotting disorder for most age groups (All data are per 100,000 people vaccinated).
High infection rate
Age |
Hospitalizations prevented |
Deaths prevented |
Cases of blood clots with low platelets |
20–29 |
64 |
0 |
1.9 |
30–39 |
81 |
3 |
1.8 |
40–49 |
122 |
10 |
2.1 |
50–59 |
208 |
14 |
1.1 |
60–69 |
324 |
45 |
1 |
70–79 |
547 |
172 |
0.5 |
80+ |
1239 |
733 |
0.8 |
Low Infection Rate
Age |
Hospitalizations prevented |
Deaths prevented |
Cases of blood clots with low platelets |
20–29 |
4 |
0 |
1.9 |
30–39 |
5 |
0 |
1.8 |
40–49 |
6 |
1 |
2.1 |
50–59 |
10 |
1 |
1.1 |
60–69 |
19 |
3 |
1 |
70–79 |
45 |
14 |
0.5 |
80+ |
151 |
90 |
0.8 |
Citation:
What’s the future of vaccines linked to rare clotting disorders? Science breaks down the latest
Science Magazine, May 3, 2021