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Title: | Influenza vaccine efficacy in young children attending childcare: A randomised controlled trial | Authors: | Booy, Robert Li‐Kim‐Moy, Jean P. Yin, Jiehui K. Heron, Leon Leask, Julie Lambert, Stephen B. Nissen, Michael Sloots, Theo |
Issue Date: | 2017 | Source: | 53, (1), 2017, p. 47-54 | Pages: | 47-54 | Journal: | Journal of Paediatrics & Child Health | Abstract: | Aim: Influenza causes a substantial burden in young children. Vaccine efficacy (VE) data are limited in this age group. We examined trivalent influenza vaccine (TIV) efficacy and safety in young children attending childcare.Methods: A double-blind, randomised controlled trial in children aged 6 to <48 months was conducted with recruitment from Sydney childcare centres in 2011. Children were randomised to receive two doses of TIV or control hepatitis A vaccine. Efficacy was evaluated against polymerase chain reaction-confirmed influenza using parent-collected nose/throat swabs during influenza-like-illness. Safety outcomes were assessed during 6 months of follow-up.Results: Fifty-seven children were allocated to influenza vaccine and 67 to control; all completed the study. The influenza attack rate was 1.8 vs 13.4% in the TIV and control groups, respectively; VE 87% (95%CI: 0-98%). For children aged 24 to <48 months, 0 vs 8 (18.6%) influenza infections occurred in the TIV and control groups respectively, giving a VE of 100% (16-100%). Efficacy was not shown in children 6 to <24 months, probably due to insufficient power. Injection site and systemic adverse events were mostly mild to moderate with no significant differences, apart from more mild diarrhoea following dose 2 in TIV recipients (11.8 vs 0%).Conclusions: Influenza vaccine appeared efficacious in the subgroup of children aged 24 to <48 months, although caution is required due to the small number of participants. There were no serious adverse events and most parents would vaccinate again. Influenza vaccination in a childcare setting could be valuable and a larger confirmatory study would be helpful.research; randomized controlled trial. Journal Subset: Australia & New Zealand; Biomedical; Blind Peer Reviewed; Editorial Board Reviewed; Expert Peer Reviewed. Special Interest: Evidence-Based Practice. NLM UID: 9005421.PMID: NLM27592696. | DOI: | 10.1111/jpc.13313 | Resources: | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=ip,athens&db=ccm&AN=120629137&site=ehost-live | Keywords: | Hepatitis A -- Prevention and Control;Human;Hepatitis A Vaccines -- Administration and Dosage;Influenza Vaccine -- Administration and Dosage;Vaccines;Child, Preschool;Treatment Outcomes;Middle Age;Female;Male;Influenza, Human -- Prevention and Control;Validation Studies;Comparative Studies;Evaluation Research;Multicenter Studies;Randomized Controlled Trials;Influenza Vaccine -- StandardsChild Care;Data Collection;Adult;Infant;Double-Blind Studies | Type: | Article |
Appears in Sites: | Children's Health Queensland Publications |
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