Abstract

An exploratory household transmission study was nested in SPECTRA, the phase 2/3 efficacy study of the adjuvanted recombinant protein-based COVID-19 vaccine SCB-2019. We compared the occurrence of confirmed COVID-19 infections between households and household contacts of infected SPECTRA placebo or SCB-2019 recipients. SPECTRA participants at 8 study sites in the Philippines who developed real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR)-confirmed COVID-19 were contacted by a study team blinded to assignment of index cases to vaccine or placebo groups to enroll in this household transmission study. Enrolled households and household contacts were monitored for 3 weeks using rRT-PCR and anti-SARS-CoV-2 N-antigen IgG/IgM testing to detect new COVID-19 infections. One hundred fifty-four eligible COVID-19 index cases (51 vaccinees, 103 placebo) were included. The secondary attack rate per household for symptomatic COVID-19 infection was 0.76% (90% CI: .15-3.90%) if the index case was an SCB-2019 vaccinee compared with 5.88% (90% CI: 3.20-10.8%) for placebo index cases, a relative risk reduction (RRR) of 79% (90% CI: -28% to 97%). The RRR of symptomatic COVID-19 per household member was similar: 84% (90% CI: 28-97%). The impact on attack rates in household members if index cases were symptomatic (n = 130; RRR = 80%; 90% CI: 7-96%) or asymptomatic (n = 24; RRR = 100%; 90% CI: -76% to 100%) was measurable but the low numbers undermine the clinical significance. In this prospective household contact study vaccination with SCB-2019 reduced SARS-CoV-2 transmission compared with placebo in households and in household members independently of whether or not index cases were symptomatic.

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