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Oil-in-water emulsion adjuvants for pediatric influenza vaccines: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Yu-Ju LinChiao-Ni WenYing-Ying LinWen-Chi HsiehChia-Chen ChangYi-Hsuan ChenChian-Hui HsuYun-Jui ShihChang-Hsun ChenChi-Tai Fang
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Standard inactivated influenza vaccines are poorly immunogenic in immunologically naive healthy young children, who are particularly vulnerable to complications from influenza. For them, there is an unmet need for better influenza vaccines. Oil-in-water emulsion-adjuvanted influenza vaccines are promising candidates, but clinical trials yielded inconsistent results. Here, we meta-analyze randomized controlled trials with efficacy data (3 trials, n = 15,310) and immunogenicity data (17 trials, n = 9062). Compared with non-adjuvanted counterparts, adjuvanted influenza vaccines provide a significantly better protection (weighted estimate for risk ratio of RT-PCR-confirmed influenza: 0.26) and are significantly more immunogenic (weighted estimates for seroprotection rate ratio: 4.6 to 7.9) in healthy immunologically naive young children. Nevertheless, in immunologically non-naive children, adjuvanted and non-adjuvanted vaccines provide similar protection and are similarly immunogenic. These results indicate that oil-in-water emulsion adjuvant improves the efficacy of inactivated influenza vaccines in healthy young children at the first-time seasonal influenza vaccination.
Keyphrases
  • clinical trial
  • randomized controlled trial
  • hiv infected
  • early stage
  • systematic review
  • machine learning
  • young adults
  • risk factors
  • computed tomography
  • contrast enhanced
  • phase ii
  • phase iii