Randomised trial of Haemophilus influenzae type-b tetanus protein conjugate for prevention of pneumonia and meningitis in Gambian infants

K Mulholland, S Hilton, R Adegbola, S Usen… - The Lancet, 1997 - thelancet.com
K Mulholland, S Hilton, R Adegbola, S Usen, A Oparaugo, C Omosigho, M Weber, A Palmer…
The Lancet, 1997thelancet.com
Background In developing countries, pneumonia and meningitis due to Haemophilus
influenzae type b (Hib) are common in children under age 12 months and the mortality from
meningitis is high. Protein-polysaccharide conjugate vaccines have brought Hib disease
under control in industrialised countries. We did a double-blind randomised trial in The
Gambia to assess the efficacy of a Hib conjugate vaccine for the prevention of meningitis,
pneumonia, and other invasive diseases due to Hib. Methods Between March, 1993, and …
Background
In developing countries, pneumonia and meningitis due to Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) are common in children under age 12 months and the mortality from meningitis is high. Protein-polysaccharide conjugate vaccines have brought Hib disease under control in industrialised countries. We did a double-blind randomised trial in The Gambia to assess the efficacy of a Hib conjugate vaccine for the prevention of meningitis, pneumonia, and other invasive diseases due to Hib.
Methods
Between March, 1993, and October, 1995, 42 848 infants were randomly allocated the conjugate vaccine Hib polysaccharide tetanus protein (PRP-T) mixed with diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis vaccine (DTP), or DTP alone at age 2 months, 3 months, and 4 months. Children who presented with signs of invasive Hib were investigated by blood culture and, where appropriate, by lumbar puncture, chest radiograph, or percutaneous lung aspirate. Children were followed up for between 5 and 36 months.
Findings
The median ages at which children received the study vaccine were 11 weeks, 18 weeks, and 24 weeks. 83% of children enrolled received all three doses of vaccine. 17 cases of culture-positive Hib pneumonia, 28 of Hib meningitis, and five of other forms of invasive Hib disease were detected amongst the study children. The efficacy of the vaccine for the prevention of all invasive disease after three doses was 95% (PRP-T vaccinees 1, controls 19 [95% Cl 67–100]), for the prevention of Hib pneumonia after two or three doses, 100% (vaccinees 0, controls 10 [55–100]), and for the prevention of radiologically defined pneumonia at any time after enrolment, 21·1% (PRP-T vaccinees 198, controls 251 [4·6–34·9]).
Interpretation
PRP-T conjugate Hib vaccine prevented most cases of meningitis and pneumonia due to Hib in Gambian infants. The reduction in the overall incidence of radiologically defined pneumonia in PRP-T vaccinees suggests that about 20% of episodes of pneumonia in young Gambian children are due to Hib. The introduction of Hib vaccines into developing countries should substantially reduce childhood mortality due to pneumonia and meningitis.
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