Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2410666 | Vaccine | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
We conducted a meta-analysis of 13 randomised clinical trials evaluating the efficacy of influenza vaccine in healthy children. Against culture-confirmed influenza the overall efficacy was 74% (95% confidence interval, CI, 57%–84%), 65% for inactivated and 80% for live-attenuated vaccine. Corresponding figures were 59% (95% CI 43%–71%), 63% and 54% for serologically-confirmed influenza, and 33% (95% CI 29%–36%), 33% and 34% for clinical illness. Influenza vaccine is effective in preventing laboratory-confirmed and clinical influenza in healthy children, with no clear difference between inactivated and live-attenuated vaccine. Data on infants and younger children were too scanty to allow separate assessment.
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Authors
Eva Negri, Carla Colombo, Laura Giordano, Nicola Groth, Giovanni Apolone, Carlo La Vecchia,