The Journal of Pediatrics
Volume 136, Issue 2 , Pages 168-175, February 2000

Efficacy of vaccination with live attenuated, cold-adapted, trivalent, intranasal influenza virus vaccine against a variant (A/Sydney) not contained in the vaccine☆☆

Department of Medicine, Saint Louis University, St Louis, Missouri; Department of Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee; Aviron, Mountain View, California; Pittsburgh Pediatric Research, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Kentucky Pediatric Research, Inc, Bardstown, Kentucky; Statistics Collaborative, Washington, DC; Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland; Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas; Department of Medicine, The University of Rochester, Rochester, New York; Department of Pediatrics, University of Maryland at Baltimore; Department of Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; Departments of Internal Medicine and Pathology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Kaiser-UCLA Vaccine Program/Harbor–University of California Los Angeles Medical Center, Department of Pediatrics, Los Angeles, California; and The EMMES Corporation, Potomac, Maryland

Received 14 April 1999; received in revised form 14 July 1999 and 23 August 1999; accepted 9 September 1999.

Abstract 

Objective: To determine the safety, immunogenicity, and efficacy of revaccination of children with live attenuated influenza vaccine. Study design: A 2-year multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled, efficacy field trial of live attenuated, cold-adapted trivalent influenza vaccine administered by nasal spray to children. This report summarizes year 2 results, a year in which the epidemic strain of influenza A/Sydney was not well matched to the vaccine strains. Each year, vaccine strains were antigenically equivalent to the contemporary inactivated influenza vaccine. In year 2, a single intranasal revaccination was administered. Active surveillance for influenza was conducted during the influenza season by means of viral cultures. Influenza cases were defined as illnesses with wild-type influenza virus isolated from respiratory secretions. Results: In year 2, 1358 (85%) children, 26 to 85 months of age, returned for revaccination. The intranasal vaccine was easily accepted, well tolerated, and immunogenic. Revaccination resulted in 82% to 100% of the vaccinated children in a subset studied for immunogenicity being seropositive as compared with 26% to 65% of placebo recipients, depending on the influenza strain tested. No serious adverse events were associated with the vaccine. In addition to the strains in the vaccine, antibody was induced to the variant strain A/Sydney/H3N2. In year 2, influenza A/Sydney/H3N2, a variant not contained in the vaccine, caused 66 of 70 cases of influenza A; nonetheless, intranasal vaccine was 86% efficacious in preventing A/Sydney influenza. Eight cases of lower respiratory tract disease were associated with A/Sydney influenza; all cases were in the placebo group. Conclusions: This live attenuated, cold-adapted influenza vaccine was safe, immunogenic, and efficacious against influenza A/H3N2 (including a variant, A/Sydney, not contained in the vaccine) and influenza B. The characteristics of this vaccine make it suitable for routine use in children to prevent influenza. (J Pediatr 2000;136:168-75)

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 Supported by the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, and Aviron, Mountain View, California.

☆☆ Reprint requests: Robert B. Belshe, MD, Saint Louis University Health Sciences Center, Division of Infectious Diseases, 3635 Vista Ave, FDT-8N, St Louis, MO 63110.

 0022-3476/2000/$12.00 + 0  9/21/102916

PII: S0022-3476(00)70097-7

The Journal of Pediatrics
Volume 136, Issue 2 , Pages 168-175, February 2000