Safety of quadrivalent recombinant influenza vaccine in pregnant persons and their infants

Amber Hsiao PhD, MPH , Arnold Yee MBA , Ruvim Izikson MD, MPH , Bruce Fireman MA , John Hansen MPH , Ned Lewis MPH , Sonja Gandhi-Banga PhD , Alexandre Selmani PhD , Oxana Talanova MD, MPH , Heidi Kabler MD , Ajinkya Inamdar MBBS, MS, MBA , Nicola P. Klein MD, PhD
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) recommend that all pregnant persons receive any licensed, recommended, and age-appropriate inactivated influenza vaccine (SD-IIV) or recombinant influenza vaccine (RIV) to protect against influenza and influenza-related complications. RIV was safe and efficacious in pre- and postlicensure studies, however there is limited RIV safety data in pregnant persons.

Objective

To evaluate the safety of quadrivalent recombinant influenza vaccine (RIV4) versus a quadrivalent standard-dose, inactivated influenza (SD-IIV4) in a large cohort of pregnant persons and their infants.

Study Design

This postlicensure observational safety study conducted at Kaiser Permanente Northern California evaluated the subset of pregnant persons vaccinated in routine care as part of a larger cluster-randomized vaccine effectiveness study comparing RIV4 vs. SD-IIV4 (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03694392). We identified pregnancy (spontaneous abortion, preterm labor, stillbirth/fetal death, congenital/fetal anomalies detected during pregnancy, eclampsia/pre-eclampsia, placental abruption), birth (preterm birth, low birth weight, small for gestational age), and neonatal/infant outcomes (infant death, failure to thrive, congenital anomalies detected after delivery) using diagnostic codes among pregnant persons ≥18 years immunized with RIV4 or SD-IIV4 during the 2018/19 and 2019/20 influenza seasons and their infants. We used conditional logistic regression adjusted for age group, race, ethnicity, trimester of influenza vaccination, comorbidities, and BMI, stratified by gestational age to estimate the odds ratio (OR) of pregnancy outcomes following vaccination with RIV4 vs. SD-IIV4. Using logistic regression, we separately estimated the adjusted OR of birth and neonatal/infant outcomes in the first year of life (eg, death) in infants of RIV4 vs. SD-IIV4 vaccinated pregnant persons.

Results

The study population included 48,781 pregnant persons (RIV4 = 14,981; SD-IIV4 = 33,800) and 47,394 live births (RIV4 = 14,538; SD-IIV4 = 32,856). There was no statistical difference in any pregnancy outcome or in birth and neonatal/infant outcome between RIV4 vs. SD-IIV4 vaccinated pregnant persons and their infants.

Conclusion

Compared with receipt of a SD-IIV4 during pregnancy, this large study did not identify any pregnancy, birth, or neonatal/infant safety concerns following receipt of a RIV4 during pregnancy and demonstrates that the safety of RIV4 in pregnancy was similar to SD-IIV4. This study provides additional evidence regarding the safety of influenza vaccination in pregnant persons and further supports ACIP and ACOG recommendations that all pregnant persons receive an inactivated or recombinant influenza vaccine.
孕妇及其婴儿接种四价重组流感疫苗的安全性
背景免疫接种实践咨询委员会(ACIP)和美国妇产科医师学会(ACOG)建议所有孕妇接种任何许可、推荐和适龄的灭活流感疫苗(SD-IIV)或重组流感疫苗(RIV),以预防流感和流感相关并发症。在许可前和许可后的研究中,RIV是安全有效的,但RIV在孕妇中的安全性数据却很有限。研究目的在一大批孕妇及其婴儿中评估四价重组流感疫苗(RIV4)与四价标准剂量灭活流感疫苗(SD-IIV4)的安全性。研究设计这项在北加州凯撒医疗机构进行的许可后安全性观察研究评估了在常规护理中接种疫苗的孕妇子集,该子集是比较 RIV4 与 SD-IIV4 的大型群组随机疫苗有效性研究(ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03694392)的一部分。我们确定了妊娠(自然流产、早产、死胎/胎儿死亡、妊娠期间发现的先天性/胎儿畸形、子痫/子痫前期、胎盘早剥)、分娩(早产、低出生体重、胎龄小)和新生儿/婴儿结局、以及新生儿/婴儿结局(婴儿死亡、发育不良、产后发现先天性畸形),使用诊断代码对在 2018/19 和 2019/20 流感季节接受 RIV4 或 SD-IIV4 免疫接种的≥18 岁孕妇及其婴儿进行分析。我们使用条件逻辑回归法对年龄组、种族、民族、接种流感疫苗的三个月、合并症和体重指数进行了调整,并按孕龄进行分层,以估计接种 RIV4 与 SD-IIV4 疫苗后妊娠结局的几率比 (OR)。使用逻辑回归法,我们分别估算了接种 RIV4 与 SD-IIV4 疫苗的孕妇的婴儿出生和新生儿/婴儿出生后第一年的结果(如死亡)的调整 OR。结论与妊娠期接种 SD-IIV4 相比,这项大型研究没有发现妊娠期接种 RIV4 后出现任何妊娠、分娩或新生儿/婴儿安全问题,并表明妊娠期接种 RIV4 的安全性与 SD-IIV4 相似。这项研究为孕妇接种流感疫苗的安全性提供了更多证据,并进一步支持了 ACIP 和 ACOG 关于所有孕妇接种灭活或重组流感疫苗的建议。
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来源期刊
AJOG global reports
AJOG global reports Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's Health, Perinatology, Pediatrics and Child Health, Urology
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1.20
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