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The Lancet Infect Dis. Efficacy of RTS,S malaria vaccines: individual-participant pooled analysis of phase 2 data

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  • The Lancet Infect Dis. Efficacy of RTS,S malaria vaccines: individual-participant pooled analysis of phase 2 data

    [Source: The Lancet Infectious Diseases, full text: (LINK). Abstract, edited.]
    The Lancet Infectious Diseases, Early Online Publication, 1 March 2013

    doi:10.1016/S1473-3099(13)70005-7

    Efficacy of RTS,S malaria vaccines: individual-participant pooled analysis of phase 2 data

    Original Text


    Dr Philip Bejon PhD a b, Michael T White PhD c, Ally Olotu MB a, Kalifa Bojang MRCP d, John PA Lusingu PhD e, Nahya Salim MD f, Nekoye N Otsyula MD g, Selidji T Agnandji MD h, Kwaku Poku Asante MD i, Seth Owusu-Agyei PhD i, Salim Abdulla PhD f, Prof Azra C Ghani PhD c



    Summary

    Background

    The efficacy of RTS,S/AS01 as a vaccine for malaria is being tested in a phase 3 clinical trial. Early results show significant, albeit partial, protection against clinical malaria and severe malaria. To ascertain variations in vaccine efficacy according to covariates such as transmission intensity, choice of adjuvant, age at vaccination, and bednet use, we did an individual-participant pooled analysis of phase 2 clinical data.


    Methods

    We analysed data from 11 different sites in Africa, including 4453 participants. We measured heterogeneity in vaccine efficacy by estimating the interactions between covariates and vaccination in pooled multivariable Cox regression and Poisson regression analyses. Endpoints for measurement of vaccine efficacy were infection, clinical malaria, severe malaria, and death. We defined transmission intensity levels according to the estimated local parasite prevalence in children aged 2?10 years (PrP2?10), ranging from 5% to 80%. Choice of adjuvant was either AS01 or AS02.


    Findings

    Vaccine efficacy against all episodes of clinical malaria varied by transmission intensity (p=0?001). At low transmission (PrP2?10 10%) vaccine efficacy was 60% (95% CI 54 to 67), at moderate transmission (PrP2?10 20%) it was 41% (21 to 57), and at high transmission (PrP2?10 70%) the efficacy was 4% (−10 to 22). Vaccine efficacy also varied by adjuvant choice (p<0?0001)?eg, at low transmission (PrP2?10 10%), efficacy varied from 60% (95% CI 54 to 67) for AS01 to 47% (14 to 75) for AS02. Variations in efficacy by age at vaccination were of borderline significance (p=0?038), and bednet use and sex were not significant covariates. Vaccine efficacy (pooled across adjuvant choice and transmission intensity) varied significantly (p<0?0001) according to time since vaccination, from 36% efficacy (95% CI 24 to 45) at time of vaccination to 0% (−38 to 38) after 3 years.


    Interpretation

    Vaccine efficacy against clinical disease was of limited duration and was not detectable 3 years after vaccination. Furthermore, efficacy fell with increasing transmission intensity. Outcomes after vaccination cannot be gauged accurately on the basis of one pooled efficacy figure. However, predictions of public-health outcomes of vaccination will need to take account of variations in efficacy by transmission intensity and by time since vaccination.


    Funding

    Medical Research Council (UK); Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Vaccine Modelling Initiative; Wellcome Trust.
    _________

    a KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kilifi, Kenya; b Centre for Clinical Vaccinology and Tropical Medicine, University of Oxford, UK; c MRC Centre for Outbreak Analysis and Modelling, Imperial College London, London, UK; d Medical Research Council Laboratories, Fajara, The Gambia; e National Institute for Medical Research, Tanga Centre, Tanga, Tanzania; f Ifakara Health Institute, Bagamoyo, Tanzania; g Kenya Medical Research Institute, and US Army Medical Research Unit?Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya; h Medical Research Unit, Albert Schweitzer Hospital, Lambar?n?, Gabon; i Kintampo Health Research Centre, Kintampo, Ghana

    Correspondence to: Dr Philip Bejon, KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kilifi, Kenya
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