News

Tetravalent dengue vaccine shown to be effective and safe in children


 

FROM ASTMH 2014

References

The phase III trial of a tetravalent dengue vaccine among children in Latin America has shown the vaccine to be protective against the virus, with significant reductions in the risk of hospitalization with dengue.

The placebo-controlled trial of a three-dose vaccine schedule among 20,869 children living in dengue-endemic regions showed a vaccine efficacy of 60.8% in the per-protocol analysis and 64.7% in the intention-to-treat population of individuals who received at least one injection, researchers said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

The vaccine had an efficacy of 95.5% in preventing severe dengue. © World Health Organization

The vaccine had an efficacy of 95.5% in preventing severe dengue.

The vaccine had an efficacy of 95.5% in preventing severe dengue and 80.3% efficacy in preventing hospitalization, while also showing efficacy against serotypes 1, 2, 3, and 4 and a rate of adverse events similar to that of the placebo group, according to a paper published simultaneously online in the New England Journal of Medicine (2014 Nov. 3 [doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1411037]).

“Overall, the results of our study and the Asian study provide a consistent picture of the efficacy and safety of this dengue vaccine after 25 months of active surveillance in 10 countries among different populations (including a variety of ages and ethnic backgrounds) over different seasons with different circulating serotypes and levels of endemicity,” wrote Dr. Luis Villar of the Universidad Industrial de Santander, Colombia, and colleagues.

The study was supported by Sanofi Pasteur. Some authors were employees of Sanofi Pasteur, and others declared institutional and research grants and honoraria from the study sponsor and other pharmaceutical companies.

Recommended Reading

Guidelines for children’s bronchiolitis treatment issued by AAP
MDedge Pediatrics
Consider strep, not MRSA, when eczematous children suffer skin infections
MDedge Pediatrics
Post-PCV13 findings prompt continued surveillance
MDedge Pediatrics
Dengue, West Nile threaten to set up housekeeping in U.S.A.
MDedge Pediatrics
DeSalvo to stay involved in health IT work
MDedge Pediatrics
Rise in Clostridium difficile, especially among kids
MDedge Pediatrics
FDA approves Trumenba vaccine for serogroup B meningitis
MDedge Pediatrics
Avoid misdiagnosing pediatric viral myocarditis
MDedge Pediatrics
How to know when a recurrent infection signals something more
MDedge Pediatrics
Low IgG1/high IgG4 ratios seen in pregnancy may alter flu vaccine response
MDedge Pediatrics