Efficacy and safety of a live attenuated, cold-adapted influenza vaccine, trivalent against culture-confirmed influenza in young children in Asia |
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Authors: | Tam John S,Capeding Maria Rosario Z,Lum Lucy Chai See,Chotpitayasunondh Tawee,Jiang Zaifang,Huang Li-Min,Lee Bee Wah,Qian Yuan,Samakoses Rudiwilai,Lolekha Somsak,Rajamohanan K Pillai,Narayanan S Noel,Kirubakaran Chellam,Rappaport Ruth,Razmpour Ahmad,Gruber William C,Forrest Bruce D Pan-Asian CAIV-T Pediatric Efficacy Trial Network |
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Affiliation: | Department of Microbiology and Faculty of Medicine, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, Hong Kong. tamj1@wyeth.com |
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Abstract: | BACKGROUND: This study was designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of cold-adapted influenza vaccine, trivalent (CAIV-T) against culture-confirmed influenza in children 12 to <36 months of age during 2 consecutive influenza seasons at multiple sites in Asia. METHODS: In year 1, 3174 children 12 to <36 months of age were randomized to receive 2 doses of CAIV-T (n = 1900) or placebo (n = 1274) intranasally > or =28 days apart. In year 2, 2947 subjects were rerandomized to receive 1 dose of CAIV-T or placebo. RESULTS: Mean age at enrollment was 23.5 +/- 7.4 months. In year 1, efficacy of CAIV-T compared with placebo was 72.9% [95% confidence interval (CI): 62.8-80.5%] against antigenically similar influenza subtypes, and 70.1% (95% CI: 60.9-77.3%) against any strain. In year 2, revaccination with CAIV-T demonstrated significant efficacy against antigenically similar (84.3%; 95% CI: 70.1-92.4%) and any (64.2%; 95% CI: 44.2-77.3%) influenza strains. In year 1, fever, runny nose/nasal congestion, decreased activity and appetite, and use of fever medication were more frequent with CAIV-T after dose 1. Runny nose/nasal congestion after dose 2 (year 1) and dose 3 (year 2) and use of fever medication after dose 3 (year 2) were the only other events reported significantly more frequently in CAIV-T recipients. CONCLUSIONS: CAIV-T was well tolerated and effective in preventing culture-confirmed influenza illness over multiple and complex influenza seasons in young children in Asia. |
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