학술논문

Benefits of Increasing the Dose of Influenza Vaccine in Residents of Long-Term Care Facilities: A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Journal of Medical Virology. May 01, 2009 81(5):908-914
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0146-6615
Abstract
Increased vaccine doses and mid-season boosting may increase the proportion of residents with protective immunity from influenza in long-term care facilities. In a multi-center study (1997-1998), 815 residents from 14 long-term care facilities were assigned at random to receive 15 or 30 μg of inactivated influenza vaccine, followed by a 15 μg booster vaccine or a placebo vaccine at Day 84. Seroresponses were re-analyzed by hemagglutination-inhibition (≥4-fold titer increases, protective titer ≥40, geometric mean titers. Forty percent of the participants had prevaccination titers ≥40. At Day 25 after vaccination, this increased to 66.3% after a 15 μg dose versus 73.3% after a dose of 30 μg (P=0.049). Participants receiving a 30 μg dose followed by a 15 μg booster showed more ≥4-fold titer increases at Day 109 (43.6% vs. 35.4%, P=0.003) and protective titers ≥40 (74.2% vs. 64.6%, P=0.041), compared to those receiving only a 15 μg dose. Differences were most apparent in participants with low pre-vaccination titers. Booster vaccination after an initial 15 μg dose of the vaccine did not increase the protective rate (61.9% vs. 63.9% after placebo). The number of participants needed to vaccinate to protect one additional resident by a dose of 15 μg was 4, by a dose of 30 μg 3, and 15 when using a 30 μg dose instead of 15 μg. Doubling the dose of influenza vaccine increased protection-related responses among residents of long-term care facilities, especially in those with low prevaccination titers.