| Literature DB >> 35119149 |
Laura Comber1, Eamon O Murchu1,2, Karen Jordan1, Sarah Hawkshaw1, Liam Marshall1, Michelle O'Neill1, Conor Teljeur1, Máirín Ryan1,3, AnnaSara Carnahan4,5, Jaime Jesús Pérez Martín4,6, Anna Hayman Robertson4,7, Kari Johansen4,8, Jorgen de Jonge4,9, Tyra Krause4,10, Nathalie Nicolay4,8, Hanna Nohynek4,11, Ioanna Pavlopoulou4,12,13, Richard Pebody4,14, Pasi Penttinen4,8, Marta Soler-Soneira4,15, Ole Wichmann4,16, Patricia Harrington1.
Abstract
This review sought to assess the efficacy, effectiveness and safety of high-dose inactivated influenza vaccines (HD-IIV) for the prevention of laboratory-confirmed influenza in individuals aged 18 years or older. A systematic literature search was conducted in electronic databases and grey literature sources up to 7 February 2020. Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and non-randomised studies of interventions (NRSIs) were included. The search returned 28,846 records, of which 36 studies were included. HD-IIV was shown to have higher relative vaccine efficacy in preventing influenza compared with standard-dose influenza vaccines (SD-IIV3) in older adults (Vaccine effectiveness (VE) = 24%, 95% CI 10-37, one RCT). One NRSI demonstrated significant effect for HD-IIV3 against influenza B (VE = 89%, 95% CI 47-100), but not for influenza A(H3N2) (VE = 22%, 95% CI -82 to 66) when compared with no vaccination in older adults. HD-IIV3 showed significant relative effect compared with SD-IIV3 for influenza-related hospitalisation (VE = 11.8%, 95% CI 6.4-17.0, two NRSIs), influenza- or pneumonia-related hospitalisation (VE = 13.7%, 95% CI 9.5-17.7, three NRSIs), influenza-related hospital encounters (VE = 13.1%, 95% CI 8.4-17.7, five NRSIs), and influenza-related office visits (VE = 3.5%, 95% CI 1.5-5.5, two NRSIs). For safety, HD-IIV were associated with significantly higher rates of local and systemic adverse events compared with SD-IIV (combined local reactions, pain at injection site, swelling, induration, headache, chills and malaise). From limited data, compared with SD-IIV, HD-IIV were found to be more effective in the prevention of laboratory-confirmed influenza, for a range of proxy outcome measures, and associated with more adverse events.Entities:
Keywords: high-dose; human; influenza; influenza vaccines
Year: 2022 PMID: 35119149 DOI: 10.1002/rmv.2330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Med Virol ISSN: 1052-9276 Impact factor: 6.989