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Efficacy and safety of bivalent RSVpreF maternal vaccination to prevent RSV illness in Japanese infants: Subset analysis from the pivotal randomized phase 3 MATISSE trial.

Authors :
Otsuki, Takeo
Akada, Shinobu
Anami, Ai
Kosaka, Kenzo
Munjal, Iona
Baber, James
Shoji, Yasuko
Aizawa, Masakazu
Swanson, Kena A.
Gurtman, Alejandra
Source :
Vaccine. Sep2024, Vol. 42 Issue 22, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Maternal vaccination with respiratory syncytial virus prefusion F vaccine (RSVpreF) is effective at preventing RSV-associated lower respiratory tract illness (LRTI) in newborns/infants. This subgroup analysis from the global, phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled MATISSE (Maternal Immunization Study for Safety and Efficacy) trial evaluated participants enrolled in Japan. Pregnant women 24–36 weeks' gestation were randomized 1:1 to receive RSVpreF or placebo. Maternal safety endpoints included local reactions/systemic events within 7 days, adverse events (AEs) through 1 month, and serious AEs (SAEs) through 6 months after vaccination. In infants born to maternal participants, safety endpoints included specific birth outcomes, AEs through 1 month after birth, and SAEs and newly diagnosed chronic medical conditions through 12 or 24 months after birth. Vaccine efficacy in infants was assessed against RSV-positive, medically attended LRTI (RSV-MA-LRTI) and severe RSV-MA-LRTI through 180 days after birth. In Japan, 230 maternal participants received RSVpreF and 232 received placebo; 218 and 216 infants born to these mothers, respectively, were analyzed. Observed vaccine efficacy (95 % CIs) against infant RSV-MA-LRTI within 90 and 180 days after birth was 100.0 % (30.9, 100.0; RSVpreF, 0 cases; placebo, 7 cases) and 87.6 % (7.2, 99.7; RSVpreF, 1 case; placebo, 8 cases), respectively. Vaccine efficacy (95 % CIs) against severe RSV-MA-LRTI within 90 and 180 days was 100.0 % (−140.9, 100.0; RSVpreF, 0 cases; placebo, 3 cases) and 75.1 % (−151.5, 99.5; RSVpreF, 1 case; placebo, 4 cases), respectively. No safety concerns were identified. AE rates ≤1 month after vaccination/birth were similar in the RSVpreF (maternal, 16.1 %; infant, 48.6 %) and placebo (19.8 %; 50.5 %) groups. Preterm birth rates were also similar (RSVpreF, 3.2 %; placebo, 6.0 %). Safety and efficacy data in Japanese participants were consistent with overall MATISSE results, supporting the efficacy of maternal RSVpreF vaccination against severe MA-RSV-LRTI/MA-RSV-LRTI in infants, with no safety concerns. NCT04424316. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0264410X
Volume :
42
Issue :
22
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Vaccine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179369241
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2024.06.009