T M Kilpi1, J Jokinen2, T Puumalainen2, H Nieminen3, E Ruokokoski2, H Rinta-Kokko2, M Traskine4, P Lommel4, M Moreira4, J Ruiz-Guinazu4, D Borys4, L Schuerman4, A A Palmu3. 1. Department of Health Protection, National Institute for Health and Welfare, P.O. Box 30, FI-00271 Helsinki, Finland. Electronic address: terhi.kilpi@thl.fi. 2. Department of Health Protection, National Institute for Health and Welfare, P.O. Box 30, FI-00271 Helsinki, Finland. 3. Department of Health Protection, National Institute for Health and Welfare, FinnMedi I, Biokatu 6, FI-33520 Tampere, Finland. 4. Vaccine Research and Development, GSK, Parc de la Noire Epine, 20, Avenue Fleming, 1300 Wavre, Belgium.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines have potential to prevent significant proportion of childhood pneumonia. Finnish Invasive Pneumococcal disease vaccine trial was designed to assess the vaccine effectiveness (VE) of the 10-valent pneumococcal Haemophilus influenzae protein D conjugate vaccine (PHiD-CV10) against several outcomes. We now report results for pneumonia. METHODS: In this nationwide, cluster-randomised, double-blind trial, children younger than 19 months receivedPHiD-CV10 in 52 clusters or hepatitis vaccines as control in 26 clusters. Infants younger than 7 months at the first vaccination received either 3+1 or 2+1 vaccination schedule, children aged 7-11 months received 2+1, and those 12-18 months of age two-dose schedule. All hospitalizations and outpatient visits to hospital associated with ICD-10 codes compatible with pneumonia were identified through the National Care Register and 1-3 frontal chest X-ray images per event were collected. External readers who were unaware of the patients' vaccination status retrospectively interpreted the images. The evaluated outcomes were hospital-diagnosed, hospital-treated pneumonia as primary diagnosis, and radiologically confirmed pneumonia during the blinded, intention-to-treat follow-up period from the first vaccination to the end of 2011. Total VE was calculated as 1 minus rate ratio of all pneumonia episodes. RESULTS:47 366 children were enrolled from February 2009, to October 2010. VE against all episodes of hospital-diagnosed pneumonia was 27% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 14%, 38%), 32% (95% CI: 3%, 52%), and 23% (95% CI: -5%, 44%) in subjects enrolled at age <7, 7-11, and 12-18 months, respectively. Corresponding rate reductions were 3.4, 4.7, and 2.5 per 1000 person-years. VE estimates against pneumonia with alveolar consolidation or pleural effusion (WHO criteria) in the three cohorts were 45% (95% CI: 26%, 60%), 56% (95% CI: 14%, 77%), and 48% (95% CI: 2%, 73%), respectively. CONCLUSION:PHiD-CV10 vaccination remarkably reduced disease burden due to pneumonia in infants and young children. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: Main trial NCT00861380, nested carriage and otitis media trial NCT00839254 (ClinicalTrials.gov).
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines have potential to prevent significant proportion of childhood pneumonia. Finnish Invasive Pneumococcal disease vaccine trial was designed to assess the vaccine effectiveness (VE) of the 10-valent pneumococcal Haemophilus influenzae protein D conjugate vaccine (PHiD-CV10) against several outcomes. We now report results for pneumonia. METHODS: In this nationwide, cluster-randomised, double-blind trial, children younger than 19 months received PHiD-CV10 in 52 clusters or hepatitis vaccines as control in 26 clusters. Infants younger than 7 months at the first vaccination received either 3+1 or 2+1 vaccination schedule, children aged 7-11 months received 2+1, and those 12-18 months of age two-dose schedule. All hospitalizations and outpatient visits to hospital associated with ICD-10 codes compatible with pneumonia were identified through the National Care Register and 1-3 frontal chest X-ray images per event were collected. External readers who were unaware of the patients' vaccination status retrospectively interpreted the images. The evaluated outcomes were hospital-diagnosed, hospital-treated pneumonia as primary diagnosis, and radiologically confirmed pneumonia during the blinded, intention-to-treat follow-up period from the first vaccination to the end of 2011. Total VE was calculated as 1 minus rate ratio of all pneumonia episodes. RESULTS: 47 366 children were enrolled from February 2009, to October 2010. VE against all episodes of hospital-diagnosed pneumonia was 27% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 14%, 38%), 32% (95% CI: 3%, 52%), and 23% (95% CI: -5%, 44%) in subjects enrolled at age <7, 7-11, and 12-18 months, respectively. Corresponding rate reductions were 3.4, 4.7, and 2.5 per 1000 person-years. VE estimates against pneumonia with alveolar consolidation or pleural effusion (WHO criteria) in the three cohorts were 45% (95% CI: 26%, 60%), 56% (95% CI: 14%, 77%), and 48% (95% CI: 2%, 73%), respectively. CONCLUSION: PHiD-CV10 vaccination remarkably reduced disease burden due to pneumonia in infants and young children. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: Main trial NCT00861380, nested carriage and otitis media trial NCT00839254 (ClinicalTrials.gov).
Authors: Hanna Rinta-Kokko; Arto A Palmu; Esa Ruokokoski; Heta Nieminen; Marta Moreira; Lode Schuerman; Dorota Borys; Jukka Jokinen Journal: PLoS One Date: 2022-01-05 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Kaatje Bollaerts; Mark A Fletcher; Jose A Suaya; Germaine Hanquet; Marc Baay; Bradford D Gessner Journal: Clin Infect Dis Date: 2022-04-28 Impact factor: 20.999