Sunday 15 August 2021

Urgent: Covid-19 vaccines and miscarriage risk


Corrected on August 26th 2021





This was the headline of news media in the UK on the evening of Saturday August 14th. It shows that Carrie Johnson, the wife of the Prime Minister, has been seriously misinformed, and that she is not an appropriate person to be advising the public on health issues. She is not a medical scientist.

Unfortunately, she does not realise that her recent miscarriage, sad as it was, almost certainly resulted from her first vaccination, but I do not have the precise time-line. Did she complete a Yellow Card to record the time-link between her first vaccination and the miscarriage? Do any women who have miscarried do this if the miscarriage occurs within three months of peri-conception vaccination?

Carrie Johnson is not the only person to be urging pregnant women to be vaccinated:




I have indicated in a previous Blog post that I have been concerned about deaths from Covid-19 of pregnant women in the UK, especially as most of them are of South Asian ethnicity. Vitamin D deficiency was almost certainly the major causative factor, and certainly the only factor that could have been corrected immediately. By government directive, vitamin D, like ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine has not been used in the UK for the sick and dying from Covid-19, a national disgrace.

Now there is the issue of whether or not pregnant women should be vaccinated against Covid-19. It is a contentious issue because we know that medicines given during pregnancy can have damaging effects. It is vital that new medicines are tested thoroughly before being given to pregnant women. Covid-19 vaccines are new medicines, and similar medicines have never been used in the past. 

Human testing of a new medicine must be with careful randomised controlled trials, and these must include signed informed consent. This is particularly important in the new vaccines because they are not yet licensed: they are used under Emergency Use Authorisation, which implies that they remain experimental.

Randomised controlled trials of vaccines given in pregnancy have not been undertaken, but many pregnant women in the USA in particular have received vaccines. Did the women give signed informed consent?

The rhetoric

"Language designed to have a persuasive or impressive effect, but which is often regarded as lacking in sincerity or meaningful content."

The debate continues in the UK, but debate and science are by-passed by media pressure for pregnant women to be vaccinated. Pregnant women are understandably hesitant, but rather than listening to their concerns and looking at the science, pressure is put upon them to change their minds. 

The pressure is even coming from "England's Top Midwife": 

Jacqueline Dunkley-Bent, Chief Midwifery Officer for England, said: “Vaccines save lives, and this is another stark reminder that the Covid-19 jab can keep you, your baby and your loved ones, safe and out of hospital".5 Aug 2021

Powerful rhetoric, but wrong. 


Headline in the Guardian, July 30th 2021


Jacqueline Dunkley-Bent and Linda Geddes are seriously misinformed.

The data

The data presented appear to be dramatic, in fact too dramatic:

171 pregnant women admitted to hospital in the UK on account of Covid-19.

168 had not been vaccinated (98%).

3 had been vaccinated (2%). 

Such a huge difference is very surprising. Is vaccine hesitancy in pregnant women really so strong, 98%? If so, notice should be taken of this rather than just persuading them to change their minds. 

This is of course observational data, not a randomised controlled trial. But as we have seen in respect of vitamin D studies (and cigarette smoking in the 1950s), observational data are of immense importance. In human investigation, we usually need to rely on observational data.

The data have two, perhaps three theoretical explanations:

1. Vaccination is spectacularly successful in preventing Covid-19 in pregnancy (hence only 3 vaccinated pregnant women with Covid-19 in this study of 171).

2. Vaccination is spectacularly successful in preventing successful pregnancy (hence only 3 vaccinated pregnant women in this study of 171).

3. A combination of 1 and 2.

We need more information, and it is readily available from observation of pregnant women vaccinated against Covid-19 in the USA. 


The study in the New England Journal of Medicine.

https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmoa2104983

In this study the manufacturers of the vaccines were either Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna.

From a database of 3958 participants in the "V-Safe Pregnancy Registry", the study identified 827 women, aged 16 to 54 years, who had been vaccinated between December 14th 2020 and February 28th 2021 and who had completed pregnancy. Slightly more than 60% were in the age range 25 to 34.

The overall pregnancy loss was 115 (14%), 104 miscarriages, 1 stillbirth, 10 induced abortion or ectopic pregnancy.

127 were vaccinated in early pregnancy, 92 of them during peri-conception, that is, shortly before pregnancy or during early pregnancy, up to 30 days before the last menstrual period (LMP) or up to 14 days after the LMP.

We are not given a breakdown of data on the 92 and the remainder of the 127, so they must be analysed together.

700 received vaccine in third trimester of pregnancy, this being after 27 weeks (27/40)

104 of the pregnant women had a miscarriage, spontaneous abortion (SA) in medical terminology.

104 miscarriages out of 827 pregnancies = 104/827, which expressed as a percentage = 12.6%.

This formed the conclusion of the paper, reassuring women all over the world that this is an acceptable miscarriage rate, not dissimilar from "normal experience".


BUT THERE IS SOMETHING SERIOUSLY WRONG WITH THIS CALCULATION

 STATISTICAL SPIN


This section has been corrected


We can be clear about the numerator, 104 miscarriages. This is what we are investigating.

2/4=50%. If we want to reduce this percentage, we need to make the denominator bigger.

2/40=5%

What has happened in this paper is that the denominator has been made bigger, from 127 to 827.

A few simple facts are necessary to help understanding about pregnancy, perhaps those conducting the study were ignorant of thes facts..

By definition, a miscarriage (SA), the end of an unviable pregnancy, must occur before about the half-way point of a normal pregnancy. In practice 23 weeks is usually chosen for definition as before 23 weeks a delivered foetus will not be viable. A miscarriage is before 23 weeks (23/40). In the study miscarriage was defined as end of pregancy before 20 weeks, but this will not make a difference to the analysis.

If a pregnancy comes to an end after 23 weeks but before full term normal birth (40/40) it is called a premature birth, or a stillbirth if the foetus has died in utero.

The first trimester, up to 13 weeks, is the embryonic stage, and understanding this is of vital importance. The embryo develops from a single fertilsed cell which divides and differentiates into its human form. It is during this differentiation and formation that the embryo is highly vulnerable to damage with consequent abnormalities. Examples are medical teratogenicity due to thalidomide or anti-epileptics, also viral damage due to rubella. Severe damage can result in miscarriage. 

When the embryo has reached its human form, at just before 13 weeks, it becomes a foetus. The process for the remaining two-thirds of gestation is for growth and maturation rather than differentiation. Brain maturation is particularly important in the third trimester.

The NEJM paper tells us that 700 of the 827 were vaccinated only in the third trimester, 27 to 40/40. By definition this is much too late for a miscarriage. These 700 pregnant women could not have had a miscarriage, and so they cannot be included in the denominator of the calculation of miscarriage risk. 

The reality is this:

127 pregnant women received very early or peri-conception vaccination, before or very early in pregnancy.

104 of them had a miscarriage, the great majority we are told being in the first 13 weeks, the embryonic stage. Miscarriage is embryo loss.

But the 127 were only a subgroup of 1132 pregnant women who received the vaccination during the first trimester with the great majority remaining pregnancy at the time of the study. 

104 miscarriages out of how many? We do not know. It might have been 127 (= 82% miscarriage rate), but it might have been 92+1132 = 1224.

Read more of this in the next Blog post.


WHY DID THIS DISTORTION OF STATISTICS HAPPEN ?

This true miscarriage rate has been hidden from the world by a paper that is so badly written that the large number of words disguises the important numbers. The conclusion is either seriously at fault or is fraudulent. How it passed peer review to be be published in the prestigious NEJM is a mystery. 

It seems to me that there was a failure to understand the difference between an embryo and a foetus, and the huge difference between exposure of an embryo and exposure of a foetus to a potential poison, whether biological or chemical. It is important to note that the miscarriages occurred during the embryonic phase. Pregnancy is divided into three trimesters for a good reason, as the stages are distinct and should not be combined into one in scientific analysis.

We have much to learn from the thalidomide tragedy of the late 1950s. If the pregnant women took thalidomide (to help with sickness) in the embryonic stage, the baby was in danger of being born with brain mal-development, eyes incompletely formed, or serious limb shortening. If however thalidomide was taken after day 42 following conception there was no damage to what by then would be be the foetus. 

And so it is with vaccinations. There is serious damage or implantation failure in the embryonic stage, the first trimester, but no damage in the third trimester, during which pregnant women could perhaps be vaccinated safely. Although thalidomide appeared to be safe in the third trimester, medicines regulatory agencies banned it completely.  

Few people will take the trouble to access and look at the paper, and those who do will probably read just the abstract and perhaps the conclusion. These can be effectively fiction, the conclusion that is politically convenient.


What do we do now?

As a clinical doctor I have always been cautious, well-aware of the dictum "Primum non nocere" (first do no harm), part of the Hippocratic oath. I am only too aware that it is much easier to do medical harm to people than to do good, and so restraint and caution are very important. "Evidence-based medicine" has become a dictum in recent years, but during this pandemic control of medicine has shifted from professional to government authorities, which have shown restraint only in treatments other than vaccines, and then total restraint without science. 

Vaccinations are being given on Emergency Use Authorisation and use should be scientific, based on a prospective research protocol so that we can learn. But this is not happening. The study described above was retrospective and opportunistic. It provided very useful data, and it is the best that we have. It is probably too late for prospective structured research into the effect of vaccination on the outcome of early pregnancy. 

To continue to vaccinate women in late pregnancy is reasonable, as it would have been reasonable to continue prescribe thatlidomide to women late in pregnancy. We have seen clearly that the miscarriages occured early and perhaps mainly before the pregnancies would have been officially recorded. Research into the outcome of pregnancy must therefore be based on a data-set of vaccination of all women of child-bearing age, including those not yet pregnant, as was the study published in the NEJM. 

However this will no longer be possible prospectively  as informed consent for vaccination of such women must include information that very early and peri-conception vaccination will give risk of miscarriage at present unknown, but not the risk given in the NEJM paper. Would a woman accept this risk?







13 comments:

  1. Excellent piece again, David. Thank-you

    ReplyDelete
  2. David, may I offer a fourth reason for the discrepancy, without checking the numbers thouroghly

    The overwhelming majority of women being pregnant were between 16 and 40 years of age. Only a minority of these had been vaccinated. say 1-2% were vaccinated then we would if there were no effect to find that miscarriages in the non vaccinated cohort would vastly outnumber those in the vaccinated cohort.


    going to a historical document 27 April 2021

    we have the Welsh government announcing that

    "That means, we are now vaccinating:

    everyone aged 40 to 49" So in Wales, at the end of April this year only a very few women of child bearing age had been vaccinated



    https://gov.wales/covid-19-vaccination-programme-weekly-update-27-april-2021



    The first announcement that women of child bearing age were being vaccinated came
    on the 5th of May

    "everyone aged 30 to 39
    remaining adults aged 40-49" so even at this date very few women of the cohort were vaccinated

    https://gov.wales/covid-19-vaccination-programme-weekly-update-05-may-2021

    When did they do the study?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The interesting thing to watch in all countries with high vaccination rates in young women is the birth rate in six months time, or the booking rate in ante-natal clinics. How long pre-conception vaccination damage lasts for remains to be see.

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    2. The vaccinations appear to be given between Dec 14th and February 28th.

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  3. METHODS
    From December 14, 2020, to February 28, 2021, we used data from the “v-safe after vaccination health checker” surveillance system, the v-safe pregnancy registry, and the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) to characterize the initial safety of mRNA Covid-19 vaccines in pregnant persons. [https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmoa2104983]

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  4. David, I just had a look through the study, and I can hardly believe it, but they really miscalculated, you are right! They clearly say 700 of the 825 participants had their first vaccine in the 3rd trimester. In fact, the information on timing of vaccinations during the trimesters of pregnancy is missing, which must be of course the crucial information if one wants to find out whether miscarriage rate is increased or not with early vaccination.
    As you say, looks like a like white wash of vaccinations? Might a letter to the NEJM be useful? Helga

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    Replies
    1. Thanks Helga. Good for you reading the paper. There appears to have been a failure to distinguish between an embryo and a foetus. I am preparing a letter to the NEJM.

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  5. Thank you David for again sharing misinformation about the vaccine by the provax brigade. It is disappointing and disturbing that the NEJM allowed such a deliberate misrepresentation of facts to be published. A letter to the editor is essential.

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  6. I am in now at fir pregnant women getting the experimental jab, but I think this article is flawed: There were almost 4000 women in the study and roughly 1500 of them were vaccinated before 20 weeks. When looking at the preliminary data of COMPLETED pregnancies and seems very normal that the majority of them would be miscarriages since the only way a woman can “complete” her pregnancy early on is with a miscarriage especially since the vast majority of abortions/miscarriages happen early on in pregnancy.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I understand what you say. The study was not a prospective structured follow-up research excerise. It was an opportunistic retrospective of another study. The data collection was not good but as it was published in the NEJM we must take notice of its authority.

      From a database of 3958 participants in the "V-Safe Pregnancy Registry", the study identified 827 women, aged 16 to 54 years, who had been vaccinated between December 14th 2020 and February 28th 2021 and who had completed pregnancy. Slightly more than 60% were in the age range 25 to 34.

      The study failed to distinguish between embryo loss and the outcome of the foetus and lumped them together.

      We are told that of 127 women vaccinated close to conception, 104 lost their embryo (= miscarriage). Foetal damage did not occur in those vaccinated after 27 weeks into pregnancy.

      The message is perfectly clear. The authors want more women to be vaccinated in early pregnancy. With informed consent, would there be any volunteers?

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  7. I agree that the study should not have pretended it was conclusive.
    The problem is that the timing of it did not allow women vaccinated in the first trimester to complete their pregnancy (The study is only of women who completed a pregnancy, either through birth or SA).

    So it makes sense that 82% of the women that finished the study who were vaccinated early in the pregnancy did so through SA, not birth.

    The study needs to be run longer and that number will certainly come down. The mistake was not specifically saying they do not have enough data to show safety to first trimester vaccinations.

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  8. Error detected
    Further Blog post to follow

    ReplyDelete