Heterologous Covid-19 vaccines intervention effect on reactogenicity Authors Wajeha Najeeb Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences, Islamabad, Pakistan Palvasha Waheed Army Medical College, National University of Medical Sciences, Rawalpindi, Pakistan Rehana Khadim Army Medical College, Rawalpindi, Pakistan DOI: https://doi.org/10.47391/JPMA.8615 Keywords: Covid-19 vaccines, Booster immunisation, Adverse effects Abstract To determine the change in the occurrence of short-term vaccine reactions on the use of heterologous Covid-19 booster, a single centre short-term study of two months duration was conducted. It was designed as an interventional study with registered clinical trial number # SLCTR/2022/008. It was conducted on medical students and faculty of a National university of medical sciences, Rawalpindi affiliated public sector medical college. A total of 348 individuals were administered with Ad5-nCoV vaccine and 101 with mRNA-1273 vaccine. They all had been previously vaccinated with two doses of BBIBP-CorV. BBIBP-CorV reactogenicity was considered a control group. Vaccine reactions, including pain and redness at the injection site, fever, no observed reactions at all, myalgia, feeling cold, dizziness, paraesthesia in the arm, light-headedness, had a significant change in their frequencies in comparison to homologous vaccine (BBIBP-CorV) reactogenicity. ---Continue Downloads Full Text Article Published 2023-12-24 How to Cite Najeeb, W., Waheed, P., & Khadim, R. (2023). Heterologous Covid-19 vaccines intervention effect on reactogenicity. Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association, 74(1), 134–137. https://doi.org/10.47391/JPMA.8615 More Citation Formats ACM ACS APA ABNT Chicago Harvard IEEE MLA Turabian Vancouver Download Citation Endnote/Zotero/Mendeley (RIS) BibTeX Issue Vol. 74 No. 1 (2024): JANUARY Section SHORT COMMUNICATION License Copyright (c) 2023 Journal of the Pakistan Medical Association This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.