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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Ten-year follow-up on efficacy, immunogenicity and safety of two doses of a combined measles-mumps-rubella-varicella vaccine or one dose of monovalent varicella vaccine: Results from five East European countries

Giacomo CasabonaGiedra LevinieneRenata RuzkovaHana CabrnochovaDoina PlescaMihai L NeamtuDaniela VerdanovaMichael PoveyAhsan HabibPetr PazdioraRoman PrymulaVytautas UsonisJacek WysockiRoman ChlibekMária ŠTefkovičováSorin ManJerzy BrzostekHanna Czajka

subject

Slovakiamedicine.medical_specialtyVaricella vaccineAntibodies Viralmedicine.disease_causelaw.inventionChickenpox Vaccine03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRandomized controlled triallaw030225 pediatricsInternal medicineEpidemiologymedicineHumansVaccines Combined030212 general & internal medicineChildAdverse effectMumpsRubellaCzech RepublicGeneral VeterinaryGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyRomaniabusiness.industryImmunogenicityPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthVaricella zoster virusInfantVaccine efficacyConfidence intervalEuropeInfectious DiseasesMolecular MedicinePolandbusinesschildren ; efficacy ; live-attenuated varicella vaccine ; long-term follow-up ; measles-mumps-rubella ; varicella zoster virusMeasles-Mumps-Rubella VaccineFollow-Up StudiesMeasles

description

Abstract Background We assessed the 10-year efficacy, immunogenicity and safety of two doses of a combined measles-mumps-rubella-varicella vaccine (MMRV) or one dose of a monovalent varicella vaccine (V) in children from Czech Republic, Lithuania, Poland, Romania and Slovakia. Methods This was a phase IIIB follow-up of an observer-blind, randomized, controlled trial (NCT00226499). In phase A, healthy children aged 12–22 months from 10 European countries were randomized in a 3:3:1 ratio to receive two doses of MMRV (MMRV group), one dose of MMR followed by one dose of V (MMR + V group), or two doses of MMR (MMR; control group), 42 days apart. Vaccine efficacy (VE) against varicella (confirmed by viral DNA detection or epidemiological link and clinical assessment) was calculated with 95% confidence intervals using Cox proportional hazards regression model. Immunogenicity was assessed as seropositivity rates and geometric mean concentrations (GMCs). Solicited and unsolicited adverse events (AEs) and serious AEs (SAEs) were recorded. Results A total of 3705 children were vaccinated (1590, MMRV group; 1586, MMR + V group; 529, MMR group). There were 663 confirmed varicella cases (47, MMRV group; 349, MMR + V group; 267, MMR group). VE ranged between 95.4% (Lithuania) and 97.4% (Slovakia) in the MMRV group and between 59.3% (Lithuania) and 74% (Slovakia) in the MMR + V group. At year 10, seropositivity rates were 99.5%–100% in the MMRV group, 98%–100% in the MMR + V group and 50%–100% in the MMR control group, and the anti-VZV antibody GMCs were comparable between MMRV and MMR + V groups. The occurrence of solicited and unsolicited AEs was similar across groups and no SAE was considered as vaccination-related. No new safety concerns were identified. Conclusions Our results indicated that two doses of varicella zoster virus-containing vaccine provided better protection than one dose against varicella and induced antibody responses that persisted 10 years post-vaccination.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.03.085