EuroNews (English)

Study finds RSV treatment Beyfortus prevents 5,800 hospitalis­ations in France

- Lauren Chadwick

Roughly 5,800 hospitalis­ations from bronchioli­tis were avoided in France thanks to the new preventive medicine nirsevimab, Public Health France said on Friday.

The health agency cited two studies that showed that the antibody, which is marketed under the name Beyfortus, was eff ective at preventing severe cases of the illness in newborns caused by respirator­y syncytial virus (RSV).

The common respirator­y virus causes cold-like symptoms but can be dangerous for newborns and older adults. It is the leading cause of paediatric hospitalis­ation in Europe.

Cases of the virus surged following the COVID-19 pandemic, with a triple epidemic of RSV, COVID-19, and u co-circulatin­g in many countries.

Beyfortus, a preventive monoclonal antibody approved in Europe in late 2022, was provided to newborns in France starting in September 2023 as part of a preventive campaign.

But the government faced heavy criticism as demand for the antibody was much higher than expected.

The medicine is given as a single injection at birth. The active substance, nirsevimab, is a type of protein that attaches to a specifi c RSV protein to neutralise the virus.

In France, bronchioli­tis is estimated to aff ect nearly 30 per cent of newborns under two years old every year, with two to three per cent of newborns under one being hospitalis­ed for it.

Two French studies outline Beyfortus' effi cacy

Health authoritie­s monitored RSV cases in hospitals, including instances of severe illness following preventive treatment.

Public Health France said that one study the agency carried out in collaborat­ion with the Paris- based Pasteur Institute found that Beyfortus was between 75.9 and 80.6 per cent eff ective in preventing severe RSV requiring hospitalis­ation for newborns.

This was similar to the results of phase III clinical trials.

"We were able to evaluate in a very short time the positive eff ects in real life of nirsevimab (Beyfortus) on the health of infants, with the treatment's eff ectiveness estimated between 76% and 81%," said Isabelle Parent du Chatelet, head of the respirator­y infections and vaccinatio­n unit at

Public Health France.

She added that these results were sent to inform future policy decisions regarding the prevention of RSV.

'Stressed and very angry': Parents struggle to get doses of new preventive RSV antibody for babies

A second study determined, using a mathematic­al model, that between September 2023 and February 2024, nirsevimab prevented 5,800 hospitalis­ations, including 4,200 for newborns up to two months old.

This represente­d a 23 per cent reduction in hospitalis­ation for babies who arrived in an emergency department for RSV compared to a scenario where the antibody was not administer­ed.

"The two studies use diff erent approaches. One analyses real- time data in paediatric intensive care units while the other models surveillan­ce data in the population," Simon Cauchemez, head of mathematic modelling of infectious diseases at the Pasteur Institute, said in a statement.

"But they result in similar calculatio­ns of nirsevimab's eff ectiveness," he added.

 ?? ?? This electron microscope image shows human respirator­y syncytial virus (RSV) virions, in blue, and anti-RSV F protein/gold antibodies, in yellow, shedding from lung cells.
This electron microscope image shows human respirator­y syncytial virus (RSV) virions, in blue, and anti-RSV F protein/gold antibodies, in yellow, shedding from lung cells.

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