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Title: | Safety profile of the RTS,S/AS01 malaria vaccine in infants and children: additional data from a phase III randomized controlled trial in sub-Saharan Africa |
Author: | Guerra Mendoza, Yolanda Garric, Elodie Leach, Amanda Lievens, Marc Ofori-Anyinam, Opokua Pirçon, Jean-Yves Stegmann, Jens-Ulrich Vandoolaeghe, Pascale Otieno, Lucas Otieno, Walter Owusu-Agyei, Seth Sacarlal, Jahit Masoud, Nahya Salim Sorgho, Hermann Tanner, Marcel Tinto, Halidou Valea, Innocent Mtoro, Ali Takadir Njuguna, Patricia Oneko, Martina Otieno, Godfrey Allan Otieno, Kephas Gesase, Samwel Hamel, Mary J. Hoffman, Irving Kaali, Seyram Kamthunzi, Portia Kremsner, Peter G. Lanaspa, Miguel Lell, Bertrand Lusingu, John Malabeja, Anangisye Aide, Pedro Carlos Paulino Akoo, Pauline Ansong, Daniel Asante, Kwaku Poku Berkley, James A. Adjei, Samuel Agbenyega, Tsiri Agnandji, Selidji Todagbe Schuerman, Lode |
Keywords: | Vacuna de la malària Infants Àfrica subsahariana Malaria vaccine Children Sub-Saharan Africa |
Issue Date: | 23-Apr-2019 |
Publisher: | Taylor & Francis |
Abstract: | A phase III, double-blind, randomized, controlled trial (NCT00866619) in sub-Saharan Africa showed RTS,S/AS01 vaccine efficacy against malaria. We now present in-depth safety results from this study. 8922 children (enrolled at 5-17\xC2\xA0months) and 6537 infants (enrolled at 6-12\xC2\xA0weeks) were 1:1:1-randomized to receive 4 doses of RTS,S/AS01 (R3R) or non-malaria control vaccine (C3C), or 3 RTS,S/AS01 doses plus control (R3C). Aggregate safety data were reviewed by a multi-functional team. Severe malaria with Blantyre Coma Score \xE2\x89\xA42 (cerebral malaria [CM]) and gender-specific mortality were assessed post-hoc. Serious adverse event (SAE) and fatal SAE incidences throughout the study were 24.2%-28.4% and 1.5%-2.5%, respectively across groups; 0.0%-0.3% of participants reported vaccination-related SAEs. The incidence of febrile convulsions in children was higher during the first 2-3 days post-vaccination with RTS,S/AS01 than with control vaccine, consistent with the time window of post-vaccination febrile reactions in this study (mostly the day after vaccination). A statistically significant numerical imbalance was observed for meningitis cases in children (R3R: 11, R3C: 10, C3C: 1) but not in infants. CM cases were more frequent in RTS,S/AS01-vaccinated children (R3R: 19, R3C: 24, C3C: 10) but not in infants. All-cause mortality was higher in RTS,S/AS01-vaccinated versus control girls (2.4% vs 1.3%, all ages) in our setting with low overall mortality. The observed meningitis and CM signals are considered likely chance findings, that - given their severity - warrant further evaluation in phase IV studies and WHO-led pilot implementation programs to establish the RTS,S/AS01 benefit-risk profile in real-life settings. |
Note: | Reproducció del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2019.1586040 |
It is part of: | Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, 2019 |
URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/2445/135358 |
Related resource: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2019.1586040 |
ISSN: | 2164-5515 |
Appears in Collections: | Articles publicats en revistes (ISGlobal) |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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GuerraMendozaY_Hum_Vaccin_Immunother_2019.pdf | 2.91 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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