Publications by authors named "Lusine Kostanyan"

Article Synopsis
  • RSV is a highly infectious virus that causes respiratory infections, with significant effects on older adults, and a candidate vaccine (RSVPreF3 OA) showed promising efficacy rates of 71.7% for ARIs and 82.6% for LRTD in adults 60 and older.
  • In a phase 3 trial, participants aged 60 and above either received the RSVPreF3 OA vaccine or a placebo, with patient-reported outcomes evaluated through various health questionnaires.
  • Results indicated that those vaccinated had significantly fewer RSV-ARI episodes and experienced milder symptoms compared to the placebo group, suggesting the vaccine can both prevent infections and lessen symptom severity.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study evaluated the efficacy and safety of the RSVPreF3 OA vaccine in seniors (60+) against RSV-related lower respiratory tract disease (RSV-LRTD) over two seasons following either one or two doses.
  • It was a phase 3 blinded trial with 24,967 participants, showing an efficacy of about 67% for both one dose and two doses against RSV-LRTD and consistent results for severe cases.
  • Revaccination after one year was well-tolerated, but it didn't significantly enhance efficacy compared to receiving just one dose.
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Background: Older adults with chronic cardiorespiratory or endocrine/metabolic conditions are at increased risk of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)-related acute respiratory illness (RSV-ARI) and severe respiratory disease. In an ongoing, randomized, placebo-controlled, multicountry, phase 3 trial in ≥60-year-old participants, an AS01E-adjuvanted RSV prefusion F protein-based vaccine (RSVPreF3 OA) was efficacious against RSV-related lower respiratory tract disease (RSV-LRTD), severe RSV-LRTD, and RSV-ARI. We evaluated efficacy and immunogenicity among participants with coexisting cardiorespiratory or endocrine/metabolic conditions that increase the risk of severe RSV disease ("conditions of interest").

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Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is an important cause of acute respiratory infection, lower respiratory tract disease, clinical complications, and death in older adults. There is currently no licensed vaccine against RSV infection.

Methods: In an ongoing, international, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial, we randomly assigned, in a 1:1 ratio, adults 60 years of age or older to receive a single dose of an AS01-adjuvanted RSV prefusion F protein-based candidate vaccine (RSVPreF3 OA) or placebo before the RSV season.

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Article Synopsis
  • Some moms got a pertussis vaccine while pregnant, and it might affect how their babies respond to vaccinations later on.
  • Researchers studied toddlers who got their booster shots to see if the vaccine made a difference in their immune response.
  • After the booster, both groups did well, but toddlers who didn't get the mom's vaccine showed higher levels of certain antibodies.*
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Background: Pertussis immunization during pregnancy is recommended in many countries. Data from large randomized controlled trials are needed to assess the immunogenicity, reactogenicity and safety of this approach.

Methods: This phase IV, observer-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, multicenter trial assessed immunogenicity, transplacental transfer of maternal pertussis antibodies, reactogenicity and safety of a reduced-antigen-content diphtheria-tetanus-three-component acellular pertussis vaccine (Tdap) during pregnancy.

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Background: Pertussis immunization during pregnancy results in high pertussis antibody concentrations in young infants but may interfere with infant immune responses to post-natal immunization.

Methods: This phase IV, multi-country, open-label study assessed the immunogenicity and safety of infant primary vaccination with DTaP-HepB-IPV/Hib and 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13). Enrolled infants (6-14 weeks old) were born to mothers who were randomized to receive reduced-antigen-content diphtheria-tetanus-three-component acellular pertussis vaccine (Tdap group) or placebo (control group) during pregnancy (27-36 weeks' gestation) with crossover immunization postpartum.

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Background: Over the last decades, pertussis showed periodic increases in its incidence among adults, despite being a vaccine-preventable disease.

Methods: This phase III, multicenter, extension study (NCT00489970) was conducted in adults from the United States, followed at Year (Y) 5 and Y9 post-vaccination with a dose of reduced-antigen-content tetanus-diphtheria-acellular pertussis vaccine containing either 3 (Tdap-B group) or 5 pertussis components (Tdap-A group). Willing participants in Tdap groups and newly-recruited participants (Control group) received one Tdap-B dose at Y9.

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Pertussis is a highly contagious disease, for which periodic peaks in incidence and an increasing number of outbreaks have been observed over the last decades. The reduced-antigen-content tetanus-diphtheria-acellular pertussis vaccine (Tdap) can be used to boost individuals aged ≥10 years, vaccinated in infancy with a diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis vaccine (DTaP), to reduce pertussis morbidity and maintain protection against diphtheria and tetanus throughout adolescence and adulthood. This phase III, open-label, non-randomized, multicenter follow-up study (NCT01738477) enrolled 19-30-year-old participants from the United States who had received booster vaccination 10 years earlier with either Tdap (Tdap group) or Td (Td group).

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