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Delivery and Safety of a Two-Dose Preventive Ebola Virus Disease Vaccine in Pregnant and Non-Pregnant Participants during an Outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Hugo Kavunga-MemboDeborah Watson-JonesKambale KasoniaTansy EdwardsAnton CamachoGrace MambulaDarius Tetsa-TataEdward Man-Lik ChoiSoumah AboubacarHannah BrindleChrissy H RobertsDaniela MannoBenjamin FaguerZephyrin MossokoPierre MukadiMichel KakuleBenith BalingeneEsther Kaningu MapendoRockyath MakarimiOumar TourePaul CampbellMathilde MoussetRobert NsaibirniIbrahim Seyni AmaKikongo Kambale JanvierBabajide KeshinroBadara CisséMateus Kambale SahaniJohn JohnsonNicholas E ConnorShelley LeesNathalie ImbaultCynthia RobinsonRebecca F GraisDaniel G BauschJean Jacques Muyembe-Tamfum
Published in: Vaccines (2024)
During the 2018-2020 Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak, residents in Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo, were offered a two-dose prophylactic EVD vaccine. This was the first study to evaluate the safety of this vaccine in pregnant women. Adults, including pregnant women, and children aged ≥1 year old were offered the Ad26.ZEBOV (day 0; dose 1), MVA-BN-Filo (day 56; dose 2) EVD vaccine through an open-label clinical trial. In total, 20,408 participants, including 6635 (32.5%) children, received dose 1. Fewer than 1% of non-pregnant participants experienced a serious adverse event (SAE) following dose 1; one SAE was possibly related to the Ad26.ZEBOV vaccine. Of the 1221 pregnant women, 371 (30.4%) experienced an SAE, with caesarean section being the most common event. No SAEs in pregnant women were considered related to vaccination. Of 1169 pregnancies with a known outcome, 55 (4.7%) ended in a miscarriage, and 30 (2.6%) in a stillbirth. Eleven (1.0%) live births ended in early neonatal death, and five (0.4%) had a congenital abnormality. Overall, 188/891 (21.1%) were preterm births and 79/1032 (7.6%) had low birth weight. The uptake of the two-dose regimen was high: 15,328/20,408 (75.1%). The vaccine regimen was well-tolerated among the study participants, including pregnant women, although further data, ideally from controlled trials, are needed in this crucial group.
Keyphrases
  • electronic health record
  • pregnant women
  • low birth weight
  • clinical trial
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • preterm birth
  • preterm infants
  • gestational age
  • human milk
  • open label
  • deep learning
  • big data