Immunogenicity, reactogenicity and safety of an inactivated quadrivalent influenza vaccine in children and adolescents 6 months through 17 years of age in India.


Journal

Human vaccines & immunotherapeutics
ISSN: 2164-554X
Titre abrégé: Hum Vaccin Immunother
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101572652

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
30 Nov 2022
Historique:
pubmed: 3 9 2022
medline: 15 12 2022
entrez: 2 9 2022
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Efficacy and safety data on quadrivalent influenza vaccines (QIVs) for immunization of Indian children are scarce. This phase 3, registration study evaluated the immunogenicity, safety, and tolerability of a QIV in Indian children aged 6-35 months (Group 1) and 3-17 y (Group 2). Subjects received one or two doses (0.5 mL each) of the study vaccine based on their priming status. Immunogenicity (post-vaccination geometric mean fold increase in hemagglutination inhibition [HI] titers and proportion of patients with seroprotection and seroconversion against the four influenza strains), unsolicited adverse events (AEs), and tolerability were analyzed. Among 118 subjects enrolled in each group, the geometric mean(standard deviation) fold increase in HI titers against A(H3N2), A(H1N1), B(Victoria), and B(Yamagata) strains were 31.7(5.33), 10.5(6.06), 4.1(5.70), and 8.6(5.34) in Group 1 and 14.0(4.37), 9.2(4.26), 14.3(6.73), and 14.4(5.41) in Group 2, respectively. Seroprotection was achieved by 91.2%, 83.3%, 41.2%, and 68.4% subjects in Group 1 and 100%, 95.8%, 73.7%, and 89.8% subjects in Group 2, respectively. Seroconversion was achieved by 87.7%, 66.7%, 41.2%, and 64.9% subjects in Group 1 and 89.0%, 78.8%, 69.5%, and 75.4% subjects in Group 2, respectively. Vaccination site pain and fever were the most common local and systemic reactions, respectively. Systemic reactions were more frequent in Group 1 (16.9% vs 7.6%). Most subjects (>90%) did not experience inconvenience within 7 d of vaccination; <10% in both groups reported unsolicited AEs. Thus, the QIV had a positive benefit/risk profile in Indian children/adolescents aged 6 months to 17 y.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36053721
doi: 10.1080/21645515.2022.2104527
pmc: PMC9746468
doi:

Substances chimiques

Antibodies, Viral 0
Influenza Vaccines 0
Vaccines, Combined 0
Vaccines, Inactivated 0

Types de publication

Clinical Trial, Phase III Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

2104527

Références

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Auteurs

Nijalingappa K Kalappanavar (NK)

Department of Pediatrics, S.S Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Center, Davangere, India.

Apurba Ghosh (A)

Department of Pediatrics, Institute of Child Health, Kolkata, India.

Monika Sharma (M)

Department of Pediatric Medicine, Christian Medical College & Hospital, Ludhiana, India.

Latha Ravichandran (L)

Department of Pediatric Medicine, Sri Ramachandra Hospital, Chennai, India.

Nirmal Choraria (N)

Department of Pediatrics, Nirmal Hospital Pvt. Ltd, Surat, India.

Saravanan P (S)

Department of Paediatrics, Sapthagiri Institute of Medical Sciences & Research Centre, Bangalore, India.

Madhukar Pandey (M)

Department of Pediatrics, Oriana Hospital, Varanasi, India.

Pradeep N (P)

Department of Immunology, Cheluvamba Hospital, Opposite Mysore Medical College and Research Institute, Mysore, India.

Prachee Shah (P)

Department of Pediatrics, Panchshil Hospital, Ahmedabad, India.

Sneha Nair (S)

Established Pharmaceuticals Division, Abbott India Ltd, Mumbai, India.

Ashfaque Shaikh (A)

Established Pharmaceuticals Division, Abbott India Ltd, Mumbai, India.

Serge van de Witte (S)

Established Pharmaceuticals Division, Abbott Healthcare Products B.V., Weesp, The Netherlands.

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