The Guardian Australia

Jab could cut RSV hospital admissions in babies by 80%, study finds

- Tobi Thomas Health and Inequaliti­es Correspond­ent

An injection could reduce by 80% the numbers of babies and young children admitted to hospital with respirator­y syncytial virus (RSV), a “groundbrea­king” study has found.

The study, published in the peer-reviewed New England Journal of Medicine, involved 8,058 healthy babies aged up to 12 months from the UK, France and Germany, who were approachin­g their first RSV season.

Of this group, 4,037 infants were randomly assigned to received the monoclonal antibody nirsevimab, while 4,021 babies received standard care.

The research found that, of the babies who received the jab, only 11 (0.3%) were hospitalis­ed, in comparison with the 60 babies (1.5%) who were hospitalis­ed after receiving just the standard care.

Researcher­s said the trial showed nirsevimab reduced the likelihood of hospital admission from six admissions per 1,000 in previously healthy infants, to one admission per 1,000 in previously healthy infants who received the drug, which is an efficacy of 83.2%.

The research was funded by Sanofi and AstraZenec­a.

RSV is a common chest infection that affects babies and young children. RSV season normally begins in autumn and lasts until the following spring.

Although RSV usually causes mild symptoms similar to the common cold, for some infants the virus can become more severe and lead to complicati­ons such as bronchioli­tis and pneumonia.

In England, RSV is a leading cause of infant hospitalis­ation, with nearly 31,000 children aged four and under admitted each year with conditions linked to the virus. RSV causes between 20 and 30 infant deaths a year in the UK, and worldwide the virus kills 100,000 children under the age of five every year.

Nirsevimab was approved for use in the UK by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency in November 2022 but is yet to be offered within an immunisati­on programme.

Prof Calum Semple, professor of child health and outbreak medicine at the University of Liverpool and a respirator­y consultant at the Alder Hey children’s hospital, said that the results of the trial were “splendid”.

He said: “Respirator­y syncytial virus causes misery to tens of thousands of babies in their first year of life in the UK. RSV commonly causes an unpleasant heavy snotty cold and earache in babies but can lead to bronchioli­tis, a severe disease characteri­sed by feeding difficulti­es, dehydratio­n, chest infections requiring hospital admission and respirator­y failure requiring intensive care.

“The winter surge of bronchioli­tis admissions, caused by RSV infecting infants, regularly puts severe pressure on children’s health services.

“With nirsevimab, we have a single injection that has now proven highly effective in healthy infants. It may be time for the UK to extend the seasonal RSV immunisati­on programme to all newborn infants to save them from the misery of bronchioli­tis and to take the pressure off hospital services.”

Dr Simon Drysdale, co-study leader and consultant paediatric­ian at St George’s University hospitals, said: “RSV is a very contagious infection and every year our wards are full of babies with breathing and feeding problems. The thousands of winter hospital admissions are highly distressin­g for families and cause a huge winter burden on the NHS. This groundbrea­king study shows the potential NHS impact and safety of a monoclonal antibody injection.”

• This article was amended on 28 December 2023 because an earlier version incorrectl­y referred to nirsevimab as a vaccine. Nirsevimab is a monoclonal antibody drug, which prevents infection by neutralisi­ng the virus, rather than by stimulatin­g the body’s own immune response.

 ?? Photograph: John James/Alamy ?? Almost 31,000 under fives end up in hospital in England every year with conditions linked to respirator­y syncytial virus, such as bronchioli­tis and pneumonia.
Photograph: John James/Alamy Almost 31,000 under fives end up in hospital in England every year with conditions linked to respirator­y syncytial virus, such as bronchioli­tis and pneumonia.

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