Home

EMA says mRNA jabs safe during pregnancy

Pushkala AripakaReuters
The EMA says COVID-19 vaccines made using mRNA technology do not cause pregnancy complications.
Camera IconThe EMA says COVID-19 vaccines made using mRNA technology do not cause pregnancy complications. Credit: AP

Coronavirus vaccines made using mRNA technology do not cause pregnancy complications for expectant mothers and their babies, the European Union's drug regulator says after a review of several studies.

The detailed review based on studies involving about 65,000 pregnancies at different stages did not find any sign of higher risk of complications, miscarriages, pre-term births or severe side-effects on the unborn babies from mRNA shots, the European Medicines Agency said.

Pfizer and German partner BioNTech, as well as Moderna, currently supply such vaccines to European Union countries.

While the EMA acknowledged some limitations in the data, it said results were consistent across studies.

"The benefits of receiving mRNA COVID-19 vaccines during pregnancy outweigh any possible risks for expectant mothers and unborn babies," the agency said

Get in front of tomorrow's news for FREE

Journalism for the curious Australian across politics, business, culture and opinion.

READ NOW

The review by an internal team also concluded that COVID-19 shots are as effective at cutting the risk of hospitalisation and death in pregnant people as in non-pregnant people.

Several EU members have already endorsed the use of COVID-19 vaccines for pregnant people and the EMA's backing of mRNA shots is likely to bolster vaccination campaigns in smaller countries that rely on the regulator's scientific expertise.

Get the latest news from thewest.com.au in your inbox.

Sign up for our emails