Publication date: Jul 26, 2025
While prior studies found no clear evidence of an association between COVID-19 vaccination and tinnitus, concerns about a potential link remain. This study assessed the risk of tinnitus following COVID-19 XBB. 1.5 vaccination, administered alone or coadministered with influenza vaccine, using the event-dependent self-controlled case series (SCCS) design. We conducted an SCCS study among individuals aged ≥12 years enrolled at Kaiser Permanente Southern California, with tinnitus events occurring between September 1, 2023, and March 31, 2024. The exposures included Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 XBB. 1.5 vaccines, with or without influenza vaccine coadministration. The primary outcome was first-ever tinnitus (no documented history before September 1, 2023), and the secondary outcome was first-in-1-year tinnitus, identified using ICD-10 code H93. 1* in inpatient, emergency department, and outpatient settings. Risk intervals were pre-specified as 1-14 days and 1-28 days after vaccination, with person-time outside the risk interval serving as the control interval. Relative incidences (RI) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were estimated, adjusting for seasonality by including tinnitus events among non-recipients of COVID-19 XBB. 1.5 vaccines and by including calendar month in the SCCS models. With 13,940 first-ever tinnitus events among recipients of COVID-19 XBB. 1.5 vaccines, no increased risk was observed within 1-14 or 1-28 days following vaccination in overall analyses. The RI was 0. 78 (95% CI: 0. 67-0. 90) for the 14-day risk interval and 0. 87 (95% CI: 0. 78-0. 96) for the 28-day interval. Subgroup analyses by age and influenza vaccine coadministration status also showed no significant increase in RI. Similarly, no significantly elevated RI was found for first-in-1-year tinnitus in the overall analyses, age-specific analyses, or analyses by coadministration with influenza vaccine. Our findings suggest no increased tinnitus risk following COVID-19 XBB. 1.5 vaccination, either administered alone or coadministered with influenza vaccine. These results provide reassuring evidence of the safety of COVID-19 vaccines with respect to tinnitus risk.
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| Concepts | Keywords |
|---|---|
| California | Coadministration |
| Coadministration | COVID-19 vaccination |
| Influenza | COVID-19 XBB.1.5 |
| Vaccination | Influenza vaccination |
| Self-controlled case series | |
| Tinnitus |
Semantics
| Type | Source | Name |
|---|---|---|
| disease | MESH | Tinnitus |
| disease | MESH | COVID-19 |
| disease | IDO | history |
| disease | MESH | emergency |
| disease | MESH | Influenza |
| disease | MESH | myocarditis |
| disease | MESH | Guillain Barre syndrome |
| disease | MESH | pericarditis |
| disease | MESH | thrombosis |
| disease | MESH | thrombocytopenia |
| disease | MESH | syndrome |
| drug | DRUGBANK | Coenzyme M |
| disease | MESH | death |
| disease | MESH | hypertension |
| disease | MESH | obesity |
| drug | DRUGBANK | Trestolone |
| disease | IDO | symptom |