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Safety profile of the RTS,S/AS01 malaria vaccine in infants and children: additional data from a phase III randomized controlled trial in sub-Saharan Africa.


ABSTRACT: A phase III, double-blind, randomized, controlled trial (NCT00866619) in sub-Saharan Africa showed RTS,S/AS01 vaccine efficacy against malaria. We now present in-depth safety results from this study. 8922 children (enrolled at 5-17 months) and 6537 infants (enrolled at 6-12 weeks) were 1:1:1-randomized to receive 4 doses of RTS,S/AS01 (R3R) or non-malaria control vaccine (C3C), or 3 RTS,S/AS01 doses plus control (R3C). Aggregate safety data were reviewed by a multi-functional team. Severe malaria with Blantyre Coma Score ?2 (cerebral malaria [CM]) and gender-specific mortality were assessed post-hoc. Serious adverse event (SAE) and fatal SAE incidences throughout the study were 24.2%-28.4% and 1.5%-2.5%, respectively across groups; 0.0%-0.3% of participants reported vaccination-related SAEs. The incidence of febrile convulsions in children was higher during the first 2-3 days post-vaccination with RTS,S/AS01 than with control vaccine, consistent with the time window of post-vaccination febrile reactions in this study (mostly the day after vaccination). A statistically significant numerical imbalance was observed for meningitis cases in children (R3R: 11, R3C: 10, C3C: 1) but not in infants. CM cases were more frequent in RTS,S/AS01-vaccinated children (R3R: 19, R3C: 24, C3C: 10) but not in infants. All-cause mortality was higher in RTS,S/AS01-vaccinated versus control girls (2.4% vs 1.3%, all ages) in our setting with low overall mortality. The observed meningitis and CM signals are considered likely chance findings, that - given their severity - warrant further evaluation in phase IV studies and WHO-led pilot implementation programs to establish the RTS,S/AS01 benefit-risk profile in real-life settings.

SUBMITTER: Guerra Mendoza Y 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6816384 | biostudies-literature | 2019

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Safety profile of the RTS,S/AS01 malaria vaccine in infants and children: additional data from a phase III randomized controlled trial in sub-Saharan Africa.

Guerra Mendoza Yolanda Y   Garric Elodie E   Leach Amanda A   Lievens Marc M   Ofori-Anyinam Opokua O   Pirçon Jean-Yves JY   Stegmann Jens-Ulrich JU   Vandoolaeghe Pascale P   Otieno Lucas L   Otieno Walter W   Owusu-Agyei Seth S   Sacarlal Jahit J   Masoud Nahya Salim NS   Sorgho Hermann H   Tanner Marcel M   Tinto Halidou H   Valea Innocent I   Mtoro Ali Takadir AT   Njuguna Patricia P   Oneko Martina M   Otieno Godfrey Allan GA   Otieno Kephas K   Gesase Samwel S   Hamel Mary J MJ   Hoffman Irving I   Kaali Seyram S   Kamthunzi Portia P   Kremsner Peter P   Lanaspa Miguel M   Lell Bertrand B   Lusingu John J   Malabeja Anangisye A   Aide Pedro P   Akoo Pauline P   Ansong Daniel D   Asante Kwaku Poku KP   Berkley James A JA   Adjei Samuel S   Agbenyega Tsiri T   Agnandji Selidji Todagbe ST   Schuerman Lode L  

Human vaccines & immunotherapeutics 20190423 10


A phase III, double-blind, randomized, controlled trial (NCT00866619) in sub-Saharan Africa showed RTS,S/AS01 vaccine efficacy against malaria. We now present in-depth safety results from this study. 8922 children (enrolled at 5-17 months) and 6537 infants (enrolled at 6-12 weeks) were 1:1:1-randomized to receive 4 doses of RTS,S/AS01 (R3R) or non-malaria control vaccine (C3C), or 3 RTS,S/AS01 doses plus control (R3C). Aggregate safety data were reviewed by a multi-functional team. Severe malari  ...[more]

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