aa Hoberman 2003a.
Methods | RCT to assess the effectiveness of inactivated influenza vaccine against OM and influenza. 2 groups in 2 following years were randomised before beginning of the respiratory season (1 December to 31 March of each year) to receive 2 doses of vaccine or placebo. | |
Participants | Children aged 6 to 24 months enrolled at Children Hospital of Pittsburgh. In the first study year, 417 children were enrolled and randomised between 4 October and 30 November 1999 to receive 2 doses of vaccine or placebo. In the second study year, 376 children were randomised between 5 September and 8 December 2000. | |
Interventions |
First study year:
versus
In both years, 2 doses were administered 4 weeks apart. Of the 417 initial participants, 278 were randomised to receive vaccine and 139 to placebo. 5 children in the vaccine group and 1 in the placebo group were discarded because of failure to meet eligibility criteria. The first dose was administered to 273 (vaccine) and 138 (placebo) children. The second dose was administered to 267 and 134 participants, respectively. Second study year:
versus
1 child from the placebo group was excluded for failure to reach eligibility. 252 children were administered vaccine, 123 placebo. The second dose was administered to 246 and 118 children, respectively. |
|
Outcomes |
Serological
Effectiveness First study year: biweekly visit carried out after the second dose of vaccine up to 31 March 2000 (4 months); monthly visits up to 15 November 2000. Second study year: biweekly visits from after second dose was administered (December 2000) up to 31 March 2001 (4 months). Parents were instructed to contact staff for cases of upper respiratory tract infection or otitis. In these cases an interim visit was conducted.
In the first study year, 25 cases occurred during the epidemic and a further 12 in the following 25 weeks of surveillance. In the second study year, the corresponding values were 11 and 2 (16 weeks' surveillance). Safety
|
|
Funding Source | Industry | |
Notes | The authors conclude that the vaccine was well tolerated but had no effect on OM, resource consumption, or any of the other indicators. | |
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Low risk | Random number, computer‐generated list, block randomisation (block of 9) |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Low risk | "randomisation lists were kept in locked files not accessible to blinded personnel" |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Double‐blinded |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Proportion of missing outcomes compared with observed event risk not enough to have a clinically relevant impact on the intervention effect estimate. |
Summary assessments | Low risk | Plausible bias unlikely to seriously alter the results. |