| Literature DB >> 35507508 |
Karen J Hager1, Gonzalo Pérez Marc1, Philipe Gobeil1, Ricardo S Diaz1, Gretchen Heizer1, Conrado Llapur1, Alexander I Makarkov1, Eduardo Vasconcellos1, Stéphane Pillet1, Fernando Riera1, Pooja Saxena1, Priscila Geller Wolff1, Kapil Bhutada1, Garry Wallace1, Hessam Aazami1, Christine E Jones1, Fernando P Polack1, Luciana Ferrara1, Judith Atkins1, Iohann Boulay1, Jiwanjeet Dhaliwall1, Nathalie Charland1, Manon M J Couture1, Julia Jiang-Wright1, Nathalie Landry1, Sophie Lapointe1, Aurélien Lorin1, Asif Mahmood1, Lawrence H Moulton1, Emmy Pahmer1, Julie Parent1, Annie Séguin1, Luan Tran1, Thomas Breuer1, Maria-Angeles Ceregido1, Marguerite Koutsoukos1, François Roman1, Junya Namba1, Marc-André D'Aoust1, Sonia Trepanier1, Yosuke Kimura1, Brian J Ward1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Coronavirus-like particles (CoVLP) that are produced in plants and display the prefusion spike glycoprotein of the original strain of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) are combined with an adjuvant (Adjuvant System 03 [AS03]) to form the candidate vaccine.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35507508 PMCID: PMC9127773 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2201300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: N Engl J Med ISSN: 0028-4793 Impact factor: 176.079
Figure 1Enrollment, Randomization, and Analysis Populations.
The data-cutoff date for the primary vaccine efficacy analysis was August 20, 2021. Of the 25,170 participants who were recruited, 24,141 underwent randomization in the intention-to-treat population. These participants had no virologic evidence of Covid-19 before receiving the trial injection. The safety population included 24,076 participants who had received one or more trial injections. The per-protocol population included 20,090 participants who had received two trial injections as scheduled and had no major protocol deviations. Participants may have discontinued their involvement in the trial after qualification as part of the per-protocol population (shown in the bottom set of boxes). An additional 10 participants withdrew from the study (4 in the vaccine group and 6 in the placebo group), and the timing of their discontinuation (by day 21, by day 42, or after day 42) could not be ascertained with confidence.
Figure 2Vaccine Efficacy, According to Subgroup and Variant.
Shown are the results of the efficacy analysis of the CoVLP+AS03 vaccine in preventing Covid-19 according to subgroup of participants (Panel A) and according to variant (Panel B) in the intention-to-treat population; 22 samples had not yet been sequenced. In both panels, the incidence rate was calculated as the number of cases per person-year. Variant-specific values probably overestimate the true vaccine efficacy, since cases that were positive on polymerase-chain-reaction (PCR) assay but had no available sequencing data were asymmetrically distributed (14 in the vaccine group and 7 in the placebo group). The implications of these missing data for the variant-specific efficacy estimates are discussed in the Supplementary Appendix. Race or ethnic group was reported by the participants. NA denotes not applicable.
Figure 3Cumulative Incidence of Covid-19, According to Population and Presence of Variants.
Shown is the cumulative incidence of adjudicated Covid-19 in the intention-to-treat population (Panel A), in the per-protocol population (Panel B), and according to the presence of the delta or gamma variant in the intention-to-treat population (Panel C), starting 7 days after the second vaccination. Covid-19 cases were confirmed on the basis of PCR-positive nasopharyngeal swabs and were independently adjudicated by a subcommittee of the data and safety monitoring committee.
Figure 4Viral Load at the Time of Covid-19 Diagnosis.
Panel A shows viral loads for patients for whom data were available in the two groups, arranged in violin plots. Within each plot, the red dashed line indicates the median, and the black dashed line indicates the lower limit of detection (LLOD). Panel B shows mean viral loads, presented as log10 virus copies per milliliter, according to subgroup. All analyses were performed in the intention-to-treat population. NE denotes not estimable.
Figure 5Solicited Local and Systemic Adverse Events during 7 Days after the First or Second Dose.
Participants were monitored for local and systemic solicited adverse events through 7 days after administration of the trial injection. Participants who reported having no adverse events or who had missing data make up the remainder of the 100% calculation (not shown). For each category, adverse events are classified as follows: grade 1, mild; grade 2, moderate; and grade 3, severe. In addition, six grade 4 events (potentially life-threatening) were reported in 3 participants after the second injection: in 2 participants in the vaccine group (1 participant with chills, general discomfort, headache, and muscles aches and 1 participant with fever) and in 1 participant in the placebo group (headache) (proportional representation not visible in the graph). If a participant had different grades of the same adverse event, the highest grade was reported. If any of the solicited adverse events persisted beyond day 7 after administration of the trial injection, it was recorded as an unsolicited adverse event. Fever was defined as an oral temperature of at least 38.0°C.