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Transparent access to VAERS data for informed decision-making. We present the data as-is, with appropriate context and disclaimers.

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Data source: VAERS (Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System)

Data through 2026 · Updated quarterly

Built by TheDataProject.ai · © 2026 VaccineWatch

Important: VAERS accepts reports of adverse events following vaccination. For any given report, there is no certainty that the reported event was caused by the vaccine. Reports may contain information that is incomplete, inaccurate, coincidental, or unverifiable. Most reports to VAERS are voluntary, which means they are subject to biases. This data cannot be used to determine if vaccines cause or contribute to adverse events.

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Important: VAERS reports alone cannot determine if a vaccine caused an adverse event. Reports may contain incomplete, inaccurate, or unverified information. Correlation does not equal causation.

  1. Home
  2. Vaccines
  3. Influenza, Seasonal
  4. Monoclonal gammopathy
Influenza, Seasonal×Monoclonal gammopathy

Monoclonal gammopathy Reports for Influenza, Seasonal

#1989 most reported symptom for this vaccine

4
Reports
0
Deaths
4
Hospitalizations
0
Mortality Rate
%
100
Hosp. Rate
%

Monoclonal gammopathy and Influenza, Seasonal

Monoclonal gammopathy has been reported 4 times in association with Influenza, Seasonal vaccination in VAERS. This represents 0.0% of all 32,816 reports for this vaccine.

Among these reports, 0 mentioned death (0.00%) and 4 involved hospitalization (100.0%).

Monoclonal gammopathy is the #1989 most frequently reported symptom for Influenza, Seasonal out of 2462 total symptoms.

Disclaimer: VAERS reports describe events that occurred after vaccination but do not establish that the vaccine caused the event. Many reported symptoms may be coincidental or related to underlying conditions.

What This Means

Seeing 4 reports of Monoclonal gammopathy after Influenza, Seasonal vaccination may seem alarming, but context is critical.

The mortality rate among these reports is very low at 0.00%, suggesting most cases are non-fatal.

Important Context

•Association, not causation: These reports show Monoclonal gammopathy occurred after vaccination, not that the vaccine caused it.
•Background rates: Monoclonal gammopathy may occur naturally at baseline rates in the population, unrelated to vaccination.
•Anyone can report: VAERS accepts reports from anyone — patients, parents, healthcare providers — without requiring medical verification.
•Denominator missing: VAERS counts reports, not rates per dose. Without knowing how many doses were given, raw counts can be misleading. Learn more →

Similarly Ranked Symptoms

Ultrasound eye abnormal4 reportsHaemangioma of bone4 reportsPOEMS syndrome4 reportsSkeletal survey abnormal4 reports

Quick Facts

Reports:4
Deaths:0
Hospitalizations:4
% of Vaccine:0.0%
Rank:#1989 of 2462

Related Pages

Influenza, Seasonal OverviewMonoclonal gammopathy (All Vaccines)Why Raw Numbers MisleadTop Symptoms Analysis

Data Source

This data comes from the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), jointly managed by CDC and FDA.