Vaccine trial as “probe” to define the burden of pneumococcal pneumonia disease [Comment]
Data(s) |
26/03/2005
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Resumo |
In today's Lancet, Felicity Cutts and colleagues present their findings on the randomised double-blind placebo controlled trial on the efficacy of a nine-valent pneumococcal conjugate-vaccine (9PCV) against radiologically confirmed pneumonia and invasive pneumococcal disease in children immunised before 12 months of age in The Gambia. The study site is a rural African setting with high child-mortality, a low prevalence of HIV-1 infection in pregnant mothers, and with endemic malaria. The authors report a vaccine efficacy of 37% (95% CI 27–45%) against first-episodes of radiological pneumonia in a per-protocol analysis. Intention-to-treat analysis showed similar results. The investigators also found that the vaccine could significantly reduce the incidence of vaccine-type invasive pneumococcal disease by 77%, by 50% for all-serotype invasive pneumococcal disease, by 15% for all-cause health-facility admissions, and by 16% for overall child mortality. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Lancet Publishing Group |
Palavras-Chave | #Medicine, General & Internal #Conjugate Vaccine #Children #Efficacy #Safety #CX #320000 Medical and Health Sciences #110309 Infectious Diseases |
Tipo |
Journal Article |