Pregnant women are at increased risk for complications and death associated with pandemic H1N1 influenza infection and they are prioritized for vaccination by public health authorities. Few data are available on the safety of adjuvants as components of pandemic vaccines that could be given systematically to pregnant women. Here we review nonclinical and clinical data on pregnancy outcomes associated with exposure to MF59, an adjuvant used in licensed H1N1 pandemic vaccines. Evaluation of the reproductive and developmental toxicity of MF59 alone and of a candidate MF59-adjuvanted H5N1 vaccine in animals demonstrated no evidence of teratogenicity or impact on fetal or early perinatal development. The clinical trial database encompassing all Novartis vaccine studies from 1991 to 2009 was searched to compare pregnancy outcomes in subjects exposed to MF59-adjuvanted or unadjuvanted influenza vaccines. Analysis of the clinical trial database found that the distribution of pregnancy outcomes (normal, abnormal, or ending in induced abortion) was similar in subjects exposed to MF59-adjuvanted and unadjuvanted influenza vaccine at any time in pregnancy and also, specifically, in early pregnancy: the respective proportions reported as a normal pregnancy outcome were 70% and 75%, respectively, overall, and 61% and 68%, respectively, in early pregnancy. Although data from the clinical database are too few to draw definitive conclusions on risks associated with exposure to MF59-adjuvanted influenza vaccines during pregnancy, available observations, so far, indicate no signals of a risk. Further data will be forthcoming from planned post-licensure studies of adjuvanted H1N1 vaccines as they are distributed in the pandemic response.

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