BACKGROUNDA trial involving adults 50 years of age or older showed that the herpes zoster subunit vaccine (HZ/su) containing recombinant varicella-zoster virus glycoprotein E and the AS01 B 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 .
METHODSThis 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.
RESULTSIn 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.
CONCLUSIONSIn our trial, HZ/su was found to reduce the risks of herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia among adults 70 years of age or older. (
1020T h e ne w e ngl a nd jou r na l o f m e dicine H erpes zoster, or shingles, results from the reactivation of latent varicellazoster virus (VZV) and typically manifests as a vesicular, painful dermatomal rash.
RZV reduced the HZ burden of illness significantly, particularly due to its very high VE in preventing HZ. For breakthrough HZ cases, the results suggest that RZV mitigated severity of HZ-related pain, burden of interference with ADLs and recipients' utility loss.
Pharyngitis (sore throat) is usually caused by viral infections; therefore, antibiotics are generally not warranted. Flurbiprofen 8.75 mg spray (maximum five doses/day, for three days) provides effective symptomatic relief.
ABSTRACTBackground: Viral infections cause most cases of pharyngitis (sore throat); consequently, antibiotics are generally not warranted. However, a treatment targeting pain and inflammation, e.g. a topical non-steroidal anti-inflammatory spray, may be helpful for patients. Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of flurbiprofen 8.75 mg spray. Methods: This randomised, double-blind, parallel group study was conducted at six communitybased clinical research centres in Australia and two in New Zealand. Adults with sore throat due to upper respiratory tract infection (onset four days) took one dose of flurbiprofen (n ¼ 249) or placebo spray (n ¼ 256); after six hours, they could re-dose every three-six hours as required, for three days (max. five doses/day). The primary endpoint was the area under the change from baseline curve in throat soreness from zero-two hours (AUC 0-2h ). The change from baseline in other sore throat symptoms also assessed efficacy. Results: The mean AUC 0-2h for throat soreness was significantly greater with flurbiprofen spray (À1.82; 95% CI: À1.98 to 1.65) compared with placebo (À1.13; 95% CI: À1.27 to 0.99) (P < 0.0001). Significantly greater reductions from baseline were observed with flurbiprofen spray compared with placebo from the first time-points assessed (five minutes for throat soreness/difficulty swallowing, 20 minutes for sore throat pain intensity and 30 minutes for swollen throat) for up to six hours (P < 0.05 for all). There was no significant difference in adverse events between treatment groups during the three-day study. Conclusion: Flurbiprofen spray provides rapid and long-lasting relief from sore throat symptoms, and is well-tolerated over three days.
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