Latest News

Vaccinating pregnant women protects infants against severe RSV infection


 

Final evaluation pending

“I am definitely finding the data interesting, but the original data are needed,” Dr. Mertens said. Once the data are published at a conference or published in a peer-reviewed journal, physicians will be able to better judge the data for themselves, he said.

Dr. Rose characterized the new vaccine as “novel,” including in terms of its composition. Earlier RSV vaccines used the so-called postfusion F protein as their starting point. But it has become known in the meantime that the key to immunogenicity is the continued prefusion state of the apical epitope: Prefusion F-specific memory B cells in adults naturally infected with RSV produce potent neutralizing antibodies.

The new vaccine is bivalent and protects against both RSV A and RSV B.

To date, RSV vaccination directly in young infants have had only had a weak efficacy and were sometimes poorly tolerated. The vaccine presented here is expected to be tested in young adults first, then in school children, then young children.

Through successful vaccination of the entire population, the transfer of RS viruses to young children could be prevented. “To what extent this, or any other RSV vaccine still to be developed on the same basis, will also be effective and well tolerated in young infants is still difficult to assess,” said Dr. Rose.

Dr. Mertens emphasized that all of the study data now needs to be seen as quickly as possible: “This is also a general requirement for transparency from the pharmaceutical companies, which is also rightly criticized.”

This article was originally published in Medscape’s German edition and a version appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Congenital cytomegalovirus declined in wake of COVID-19
MDedge ObGyn
Malaria vaccine gets special delivery by tiny health personnel
MDedge ObGyn
HPV infection in pregnancy higher among women living with HIV
MDedge ObGyn
FDA: Newborns protected by whooping cough vaccine
MDedge ObGyn
For many, long COVID’s impacts go on and on, major study says
MDedge ObGyn
You and the skeptical patient: Who’s the doctor here?
MDedge ObGyn
RSV vaccine given during pregnancy protects newborns: Pfizer
MDedge ObGyn
Medicaid coverage of HPV vaccine in adults: Implications in dermatology
MDedge ObGyn
Birth method affects microbiome and vaccination response
MDedge ObGyn
COVID booster shot poll: People ‘don’t think they need one’
MDedge ObGyn