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BackgroundPneumococcal conjugate vaccines are an expensive component of the routine immunization schedule. Fractional-dose regimens may be one option to increase the sustainability of the vaccine program.MethodsWe assessed whether the immunogenicity of fractional doses of the 10-valent and 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCV10 [GSK] and PCV13 [Pfizer], respectively) would be noninferior to that of the full doses and analyzed the prevalence of vaccine-serotype carriage. We randomly assigned healthy infants in Kenya to one of seven equal-sized trial groups. Participants in groups A through F were assigned to receive either a fractional or full dose of PCV10 or PCV13, administered as two primary doses plus one booster dose. In group A, participants received a full dose of PCV13; group B, a 40% dose of PCV13; group C, a 20% dose of PCV13; group D, a full dose of PCV10; group E, a 40% dose of PCV10; and group F, a 20% dose of PCV10. Participants in the seventh group (group G) received a full dose of PCV10 as three primary doses without a booster. Immunogenicity was assessed 4 weeks after the primary series of doses and 4 weeks after the booster dose. Noninferiority could be declared 4 weeks after the primary series if the difference in the percentage of participants with a threshold response was not more than 10% and 4 weeks after administration of the booster if the ratio of the geometric mean concentration (GMC) of IgG was more than 0.5. A vaccine dose was prespecified as noninferior if it met the noninferiority criterion for at least 8 of the 10 vaccine types in the PCV10 groups or at least 10 of the 13 vaccine types in the PCV13 groups. Carriage was assessed when participants were 9 months and 18 months of age.ResultsIn the per-protocol analysis, 40% of a full dose of PCV13 met the noninferiority criterion for 12 of 13 serotypes after the primary series and for 13 of 13 serotypes after the booster. The immunogenicity of the 20% dose of PCV13 and of the 40% and 20% doses of PCV10 was not noninferior to that of the full doses. Vaccine serotype-type carriage prevalence was similar across the PCV13 groups at 9 months and 18 months of age.ConclusionsIn a three-dose schedule (two primary doses and a booster), 40% doses of PCV13 were noninferior to full doses for all included serotypes. Lower doses of PCV13 and PCV10 did not meet the criteria for noninferiority. (Funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT03489018; Pan African Clinical Trial Registry number, PACTR202104717648755.).

Original publication

DOI

10.1056/nejmoa2314620

Type

Journal article

Journal

The New England journal of medicine

Publication Date

09/2024

Addresses

From the Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (K.E.G., C.B., P.G.S., J.A.G.S.), and the Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, University College London (S.R., L.T.-Y., D.G.), London, and the Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, University of Oxford, Oxford (J.A.B.) - all in the United Kingdom; and the KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme, Kilifi (K.E.G., R.L., M.K., M.M., L.M., J.A.B., M.H., A.K., J.S., M.O., E.G., D.M., J.A.G.S.), the Department of Paediatrics, Coast General Teaching and Referral Hospital, Mombasa (B.S.), and Immunization, UNICEF (C.T.), and the School of Medicine, University of Nairobi (F.W.), Nairobi - all in Kenya.