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.

Yolanda Guerra Mendoza ORCID logo; Elodie Garric; Amanda Leach; Marc Lievens; Opokua Ofori-Anyinam; Jean-Yves Pirçon; Jens-Ulrich Stegmann; Pascale Vandoolaeghe; Lucas Otieno; Walter Otieno; +31 more... Seth Owusu-Agyei; Jahit Sacarlal ORCID logo; Nahya Salim Masoud ORCID logo; Hermann Sorgho; Marcel Tanner; Halidou Tinto; Innocent Valea; Ali Takadir Mtoro; Patricia Njuguna; Martina Oneko ORCID logo; Godfrey Allan Otieno; Kephas Otieno; Samwel Gesase; Mary J Hamel; Irving Hoffman; Seyram Kaali ORCID logo; Portia Kamthunzi; Peter Kremsner; Miguel Lanaspa ORCID logo; Bertrand Lell; John Lusingu ORCID logo; Anangisye Malabeja; Pedro Aide ORCID logo; Pauline Akoo; Daniel Ansong; Kwaku Poku Asante; James A Berkley; Samuel Adjei; Tsiri Agbenyega; Selidji Todagbe Agnandji; Lode Schuerman; (2019) 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. Human vaccines & immunotherapeutics, 15 (10). pp. 2386-2398. ISSN 2164-5515 DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2019.1586040
Copy

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.


picture_as_pdf
Safety profile of the RTSS-AS01 malaria vaccine in infants and children_Additional data from a phase III randomized controlled trial in sub-Saharan Africa.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: 3.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads