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Effect of a quadrivalent meningococcal ACWY glycoconjugate or a serogroup B meningococcal vaccine on meningococcal carriage: an observer-blind, phase 3 randomised clinical trial
- Source :
- Lancet (London, England). 384(9960)
- Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- Summary Background Meningococcal conjugate vaccines protect individuals directly, but can also confer herd protection by interrupting carriage transmission. We assessed the effects of meningococcal quadrivalent glycoconjugate (MenACWY-CRM) or serogroup B (4CMenB) vaccination on meningococcal carriage rates in 18–24-year-olds. Methods In this phase 3, observer-blind, randomised controlled trial, university students aged 18–24 years from ten sites in England were randomly assigned (1:1:1, block size of three) to receive two doses 1 month apart of Japanese Encephalitis vaccine (controls), 4CMenB, or one dose of MenACWY-CRM then placebo. Participants were randomised with a validated computer-generated random allocation list. Participants and outcome-assessors were masked to the treatment group. Meningococci were isolated from oropharyngeal swabs collected before vaccination and at five scheduled intervals over 1 year. Primary outcomes were cross-sectional carriage 1 month after each vaccine course. Secondary outcomes included comparisons of carriage at any timepoint after primary analysis until study termination. Reactogenicity and adverse events were monitored throughout the study. Analysis was done on the modified intention-to-treat population, which included all enrolled participants who received a study vaccination and provided at least one assessable swab after baseline. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, registration number NCT01214850. Findings Between Sept 21 and Dec 21, 2010, 2954 participants were randomly assigned (987 assigned to control [984 analysed], 979 assigned to 4CMenB [974 analysed], 988 assigned to MenACWY-CRM [983 analysed]); 33% of the 4CMenB group, 34% of the MenACWY-CRM group, and 31% of the control group were positive for meningococcal carriage at study entry. By 1 month, there was no significant difference in carriage between controls and 4CMenB (odds ratio 1·2, 95% CI 0·8–1·7) or MenACWY-CRM (0·9, [0·6–1·3]) groups. From 3 months after dose two, 4CMenB vaccination resulted in significantly lower carriage of any meningococcal strain (18·2% [95% CI 3·4–30·8] carriage reduction), capsular groups BCWY (26·6% [10·5–39·9] carriage reduction), capsular groups CWY (29·6% [8·1–46·0] carriage reduction), and serogroups CWY (28·5% [2·8–47·5] carriage reduction) compared with control vaccination. Significantly lower carriage rates were also noted in the MenACWY-CRM group compared with controls: 39·0% (95% CI 17·3–55·0) carriage reduction for serogroup Y and 36·2% (15·6–51·7) carriage reduction for serogroup CWY. Study vaccines were generally well tolerated, with increased rates of transient local injection pain and myalgia in the 4CMenB group. No safety concerns were identified. Interpretation Although we detected no significant difference between groups at 1 month after vaccine course, MenACWY-CRM and 4CMenB vaccines reduced meningococcal carriage rates during 12 months after vaccination and therefore might affect transmission when widely implemented. Funding Novartis Vaccines.
- Subjects :
- Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Adolescent
Population
Meningococcal Vaccines
Meningococcal vaccine
Neisseria meningitidis
Neisseria meningitidis, Serogroup B
law.invention
03 medical and health sciences
Young Adult
0302 clinical medicine
Randomized controlled trial
law
Internal medicine
medicine
Humans
Single-Blind Method
030212 general & internal medicine
Japanese encephalitis vaccine
education
0303 health sciences
education.field_of_study
Reactogenicity
030306 microbiology
business.industry
fungi
food and beverages
Meningococcal, carriage, vaccine, serogroup B, conjugate, herd protection
General Medicine
Odds ratio
3. Good health
Surgery
Vaccination
Meningococcal Infections
Carriage
Carrier State
Female
business
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1474547X and 01406736
- Volume :
- 384
- Issue :
- 9960
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Lancet (London, England)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d1453498b0b4dc63ef14b09867279d8f