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  • Efficacy and safety of the ...
    Thomas, Stephen J.; Perez, John L.; Lockhart, Stephen P.; Hariharan, Subramanian; Kitchin, Nicholas; Bailey, Ruth; Liau, Katherine; Lagkadinou, Eleni; Türeci, Özlem; Şahin, Ugur; Xu, Xia; Koury, Kenneth; Dychter, Samuel S.; Lu, Claire; Gentile, Teresa C.; Gruber, William C.

    Vaccine, 03/2022, Letnik: 40, Številka: 10
    Journal Article

    •We show BNT162b2 vaccine ph or phase 3 data from participants with baseline history of past/active neoplasm.•Efficacy and safety were evaluated through up to 6 months of follow-up post-BNT162b2 dose 2.•BNT162b2 has similar efficacy in those with history of past/active neoplasm as overall population.•BNT162b2 has favorable safety profile in these participants, similar to overall study population.•Results inform real-world use of BNT162b2 during the pandemic and future trials in cancer patients. Individuals with an underlying malignancy have high risk of poor COVID-19 outcomes. In clinical trials, COVID-19 vaccines were safe and efficacious against infection, hospitalization, and death, but most trials excluded participants with cancer. We report results from participants with a history of past or active neoplasm (malignant or benign/unknown) and up to 6 months’ follow-up post-dose 2 from the placebo-controlled, observer-blinded trial of the 2-dose BNT162b2 mRNA COVID-19 vaccine. Between July 2020–January 2021, 46,429 participants aged ≥ 12 years were randomized at 152 sites in 6 countries. Healthy participants with pre-existing stable neoplasm could participate; those receiving immunosuppressive therapy were excluded. Data are reported for participants, aged ≥ 16 years for safety and ≥ 12 years for efficacy, who had any history of neoplasm at baseline (data cut-off: March 13, 2021). Adverse-event (AE) data are controlled for follow-up time before unblinding and reported as incidence rates (IRs) per 100 person-years follow-up. At baseline, 3813 participants had a history of neoplasm; most common malignancies were breast (n = 460), prostate (n = 362), and melanoma (n = 223). Four BNT162b2 and 71 placebo recipients developed COVID-19 from 7 days post-dose 2; vaccine efficacy was 94.4% (95% CI: 85.2, 98.5) after up to 6 months’ follow-up post-dose 2. This compares favorably with vaccine efficacy of 91.1% in the overall trial population after the same follow-up. AEs were reported at IRs of 95.4(BNT162b2) and 48.3 (placebo) per 100 person-years. Most common AEs were reactogenicity events (injection-site pain, fatigue, pyrexia). Three BNT162b2 and 1 placebo recipients withdrew because of vaccine-related AEs. No vaccine-related deaths were reported. In participants with past or active neoplasms, BNT162b2 vaccine has a similar efficacy and safety profile as in the overall trial population. These results can inform BNT162b2 use during the COVID-19 pandemic and future trials in participants with cancer. Clinical trial number: NCT04368728.