The relative vaccine effectiveness of high-dose vs standard-dose influenza vaccines in preventing hospitalization and mortality: A meta-analysis of evidence from randomized trials

Kristoffer Grundtvig Skaarup, Mats Christian Højbjerg Lassen, Daniel Modin, Niklas Dyrby Johansen, Matthew M. Loiacono, Rebecca C. Harris, Jason K.H. Lee, Marine Dufournet, Orly Vardeny, Alexander Peikert, Brian Claggett, Scott D. Solomon, Jens Ulrik Stæhr Jensen, Tor Biering-Sørensen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objectives: To summarize current evidence of high-dose influenza vaccine (HD-IV) vs standard-dose (SD-IV) regarding severe clinical outcomes. Methods: A prespecified meta-analysis was conducted to assess relative vaccine effectiveness (rVE) of HD-IV vs SD-IV in reducing the rates of (1) pneumonia and influenza (P&I) hospitalization, (2) all hospitalizations, and (3) all-cause death in adults ≥ 65 years in randomized controlled trials. Pooled effect sizes were estimated using fixed-effects models with the inverse variance method. Results: Five randomized trials were included encompassing 105,685 individuals. HD-IV vs SD-IV reduced P&I hospitalizations (rVE: 23.5 %, [95 %CI: 12.3 to 33.2]). HD-IV vs SD-IV also reduced rate of all-cause hospitalizations (rVE: 7.3 %, [95 %CI: 4.5 to 10.0]). No significant differences were observed in death rates (rVE = 1.6 % ([95 %CI: −2.0 to 5.0]) in HD-IV vs SD-IV. Sensitivity analyses omitting trials with participants sharing the same comorbidity, trials with ≥ 100 events, and random-effects models provided comparable estimates for all outcomes. Conclusions: HD-IV reduced the incidence of P&I and all-cause hospitalization vs SD-IV in adults ≥ 65 years in randomized trials, through no significant difference was observed in all-cause death rates. These findings, supported by evidence from several randomized studies, can benefit from replication in a fully powered, individually randomized trial.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number106187
JournalJournal of Infection
Volume89
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors

Keywords

  • High-dose influenza vaccine
  • Meta-analysis
  • Randomized trials
  • Severe clinical endpoints

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article
  • Meta-Analysis

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