Early BCG vaccination, hospitalizations, and hospital deaths: analysis of a secondary outcome in 3 randomized trials from Guinea-Bissau

F Schaltz-Buchholzer… - The Journal of …, 2019 - academic.oup.com
F Schaltz-Buchholzer, S Biering-Sørensen, N Lund, I Monteiro, P Umbasse, AB Fisker
The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2019academic.oup.com
Background This study was performed to examine the effects of early BCG vaccination on
the risk, cause, and severity of infant hospitalizations. The analysis included 3 trials
randomizing low-weight neonates to early BCG vaccination (intervention) versus no BCG
vaccination (usual practice in low-weight neonates, control), with hospitalizations as
secondary outcome. Methods Hospitalization data were collected at the pediatric ward of the
National Hospital. Effects of BCG vaccination on hospitalization risk were assessed in Cox …
Background
This study was performed to examine the effects of early BCG vaccination on the risk, cause, and severity of infant hospitalizations. The
analysis included 3 trials randomizing low-weight neonates to early BCG vaccination (intervention) versus no BCG vaccination (usual practice in low-weight neonates, control), with hospitalizations as secondary outcome.
Methods
Hospitalization data were collected at the pediatric ward of the National Hospital. Effects of BCG vaccination on hospitalization risk were assessed in Cox models providing overall and major disease-group incidence rate ratios (IRRs). Severity was assessed by means of in-hospital case-fatality rates and compared by group as cohort study risk ratios (RRs).
Results
Among 6583 infants (3297 in BCG group, 3286 controls), there were 908 infant hospitalizations (450 BCG, 458 controls) and 135 in-hospital deaths (56 BCG, 79 controls). The neonatal (28 days), 6-week, and infant (1-year) BCG versus control hospitalization IRRs were 0.97 (95% confidence interval [CI], .72–1.31), 0.95 (.73–1.24), and 0.96 (.84–1.10). Corresponding BCG versus control case-fatality rate RRs were 0.58 (95% CI, .35–.94), 0.56 (.35–.90), and 0.72 (.53–.99). BCG vaccination tended to reduce neonatal and infant sepsis hospitalization rates (IRR, 0.75 [95% CI, .50–1.13] and 0.78 [.55–1.11], respectively), and it reduced the neonatal in-hospital sepsis mortality rate (RR, 0.46; 95% CI, .22–.98). There were no confirmed hospitalizations for tuberculosis.
Conclusions
BCG vaccination did not affect hospitalization rates but reduced in-hospital mortality rates significantly, primarily by preventing fatal cases of sepsis. The observed beneficial effects of BCG on the in-hospital mortality rate were entirely nonspecific.
Clinical Trials Registration
NCT00146302, NCT00168610, and NCT00625482.
Oxford University Press