Immunogenicity and safety of an inactivated quadrivalent influenza vaccine candidate: A phase III randomized controlled trial in children
Journal
Journal of Infectious Diseases
Journal Volume
208
Journal Issue
4
Pages
544-553
Date Issued
2013
Author(s)
Langley J.M.
Carmona Martinez A.
Chatterjee A.
Halperin S.A.
McNeil S.
Reisinger K.S.
Aggarwal N.
Peng C.-T.
Garcia-Sicilia J.
Salamanca De La Cueva I.
Caba?as F.
Trevi?o-Garza C.
Rodr?guez-Weber M.A.
De La O M.
Chandrasekaran V.
Dew? W.
Liu A.
Innis B.L.
Jain V.K.
Abstract
Background. Mismatch between circulating influenza B viruses (Yamagata and Victoria lineages) and vaccine strains occurs frequently. Methods. In a randomized controlled trial, immunogenicity and safety of an inactivated quadrivalent influenza vaccine candidate (QIV) versus trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine (TIV)-Victoria(Vic) and TIV-Yamagata(Yam) in children 3-17 years of age was evaluated. In an open-label study arm, QIV only was assessed in children 6-35 months of age. Results. A total of 3094 children (932 QIV, 929 TIV-Vic, 932 TIV-Yam, and 301 QIV only) were vaccinated. QIV was noninferior to the TIVs for shared strains (A/H3N2 and A/H1N1) based on hemagglutination- inhibition (HI) antibodies 28 days after last vaccination, and superior for the unique B strains Victoria and Yamagata (geometric mean titer ratios 2.61, 3.78; seroconversion rate differences 33.96%, 44.63%). Among children in the randomized trial, adverse event rates were similar except for injection site pain (dose 1: 65.4% QIV, 54.6% TIV-Vic, 55.7% TIV-Yam). Conclusion. QIV elicited superior HI responses to the added B strains compared to TIV controls, potentially improving its effectiveness against influenza B. HI responses were similar between QIV and TIV controls for the shared strains. QIV had an acceptable safety profile relative to TIVs. Clinical Trials Registration. NCT01198756. ? The Author 2013.
Subjects
Children; Immunogenicity; Influenza vaccine
SDGs
Other Subjects
hemagglutination inhibiting antibody; inactivated quadrivalent influenza vaccine; inactivated virus vaccine; influenza vaccine; unclassified drug; acute disease; adolescent; adverse outcome; angioneurotic edema; appetite disorder; article; child; child health care; clinical effectiveness; clinical evaluation; conjunctivitis; controlled study; coughing; double blind procedure; drowsiness; drug efficacy; drug fatality; drug safety; fatigue; febrile convulsion; female; fever; headache; human; immune response; immunogenicity; infant; infection prevention; influenza B; influenza vaccination; Influenza virus A H1N1; Influenza virus A H3N2; injection site pain; irritability; major clinical study; male; multicenter study; myalgia; open study; phase 3 clinical trial; preschool child; priority journal; randomized controlled trial; school child; seroconversion; side effect; tonic clonic seizure; upper respiratory tract infection; virus strain; children; immunogenicity; influenza vaccine; Adolescent; Antibodies, Viral; Child; Child, Preschool; Drug Toxicity; Female; Hemagglutination Inhibition Tests; Humans; Infant; Influenza A virus; Influenza B virus; Influenza Vaccines; Male; Pain; Vaccines, Inactivated; Victoria
Type
journal article