Abstract

Invasive pneumococcal disease and pneumococcal pneumonia cause substantial morbidity and mortality in the elderly. This review focuses on the immunogenicity, safety, efficacy and effectiveness data on the use of the 13-valent conjugate pneumococcal vaccine (PCV13) in adults. A MEDLINE literature search was performed from January 1946 to December 2017. Additional references were identified from a review of literature citations. All English-language randomized trials, observational studies and meta-analyses assessing the immunogenicity, efficacy, effectiveness and safety of PCV13 in adults were evaluated. Six randomized controlled studies evaluated immunogenicity and safety of PCV13 in adults and showed that the conjugated vaccine elicited a greater immune response to the majority of the 13 serotypes compared to the 23-valent polysaccharide pneumococcal vaccine (PPV23). Administering PCV13 prior to PPV23 elicits greater immune responses and multiple doses of PCV13 demonstrated modest advantage. PCV13 titers declined after a year but remained above baseline. A randomized clinical trial (CAPiTA) showed that PCV13 was effective in preventing community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and vaccine-type invasive pneumococcal disease, but not any cause pneumonia. Safety data shows PCV13 elicits minor local reactions, such as pain at the injection site. Major side effects that were commonly reported included muscle fatigue and headache. Both local and systemic adverse events were comparable to PPV23. While PCV13 has a well-established immunogenicity and safety profile in adults, there is sparse data on sequential or multiple dosing, efficacy and effectiveness in adults. As there are few countries who have adopted PCV13 for routine adult immunization, there is a need to evaluate the effectiveness of PCV13 in a real-world setting.

Highlights

  • Invasive pneumococcal disease and pneumococcal pneumonia cause substantial morbidity and mortality in the elderly

  • Both vaccines elicited an immune response after the first dose, leading to markedly higher immunoglobulin G (IgG) geometric mean concentrations (GMC) to each of the antigens compared to baseline values at 48 weeks

  • Subjects were administered three doses of 13 valent conjugate pneumococcal vaccine (PCV13) at 6-month intervals and statistically significant increases in IgG GMCs and Opsonophagocyctic assay (OPA) geometric mean titer (GMT) were observed for all serotypes one month after the first dose of PCV13, when compared to baseline

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Summary

Design

In 60-64 yrs: PCV13 arm had a statistically significantly higher OPA titers in 9/13 serotypes (1,4,6A,6B,7F,9V,18C,19A,23F) compared to PPV23.

All OPA GMT ratios are reported at 1 month after vaccination
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion

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