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Efficacy of the herpes zoster subunit vaccine in adults 70 years of age or older

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Version 2 2024-06-03, 15:31
Version 1 2016-10-10, 09:46
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 15:31 authored by AL Cunningham, H Lal, M Kovac, R Chlibek, SJ Hwang, J Díez-Domingo, O Godeaux, MJ Levin, JE McElhaney, J Puig-Barberà, C Vanden Abeele, T Vesikari, D Watanabe, T Zahaf, A Ahonen, Eugene AthanEugene Athan, JF Barba-Gomez, L Campora, F De Looze, HJ Downey, W Ghesquiere, I Gorfinkel, T Korhonen, E Leung, SA McNeil, L Oostvogels, L Rombo, J Smetana, L Weckx, W Yeo, TC Heineman
Background: A trial involving adults 50 years of age or older (ZOE-50) showed that the herpes zoster subunit vaccine (HZ/su) containing recombinant varicella-zoster virus glycoprotein E and the AS01B adjuvant system was associated with a risk of herpes zoster that was 97.2% lower than that associated with placebo. A second trial was performed concurrently at the same sites and examined the safety and efficacy of HZ/su in adults 70 years of age or older (ZOE-70). Methods: This randomized, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial was conducted in 18 countries and involved adults 70 years of age or older. Participants received two doses of HZ/su or placebo (assigned in a 1:1 ratio) administered intramuscularly 2 months apart. Vaccine efficacy against herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia was assessed in participants from ZOE-70 and in participants pooled from ZOE-70 and ZOE-50. Results: In ZOE-70, 13,900 participants who could be evaluated (mean age, 75.6 years) received either HZ/su (6950 participants) or placebo (6950 participants). During a mean follow-up period of 3.7 years, herpes zoster occurred in 23 HZ/su recipients and in 223 placebo recipients (0.9 vs. 9.2 per 1000 person-years). Vaccine efficacy against herpes zoster was 89.8% (95% confidence interval [CI], 84.2 to 93.7; P<0.001) and was similar in participants 70 to 79 years of age (90.0%) and participants 80 years of age or older (89.1%). In pooled analyses of data from participants 70 years of age or older in ZOE-50 and ZOE-70 (16,596 participants), vaccine efficacy against herpes zoster was 91.3% (95% CI, 86.8 to 94.5; P<0.001), and vaccine efficacy against postherpetic neuralgia was 88.8% (95% CI, 68.7 to 97.1; P<0.001). Solicited reports of injection-site and systemic reactions within 7 days after injection were more frequent among HZ/su recipients than among placebo recipients (79.0% vs. 29.5%). Serious adverse events, potential immune-mediated diseases, and deaths occurred with similar frequencies in the two study groups. Conclusions: In our trial, HZ/su was found to reduce the risks of herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia among adults 70 years of age or older. (Funded by GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals; ZOE-50 and ZOE-70 ClinicalTrials.gov numbers, NCT01165177 and NCT01165229 .).

History

Journal

New England Journal of Medicine

Volume

375

Pagination

1019-1032

Location

United States

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0028-4793

eISSN

1533-4406

Language

English

Notes

Prepared for the ZOE-70 Study Group.

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, Massachusetts Medical Society

Issue

11

Publisher

MASSACHUSETTS MEDICAL SOC