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Time of day for vaccination, outcomes, and relative effectiveness of high-dose vs. standard-dose quadrivalent influenza vaccine: A post hoc analysis of the DANFLU-1 randomized clinical trial

Morning influenza vaccination enhances antibody response. In this post hoc analysis of the DANFLU-1 trial, we sought to evaluate the association between time of day for vaccination (ToV) and outcomes and whether ToV modified the relative effectiveness of high-dose (QIV-HD) vs. standard-dose (QIV-SD)...

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Published in:The Journal of infection 2024-11, Vol.89 (5), p.106276, Article 106276
Main Authors: Christensen, Jacob, Johansen, Niklas Dyrby, Janstrup, Kira Hyldekær, Modin, Daniel, Skaarup, Kristoffer Grundtvig, Nealon, Joshua, Samson, Sandrine, Loiacono, Matthew, Harris, Rebecca, Larsen, Carsten Schade, Jensen, Anne Marie Reimer, Landler, Nino Emanuel, Claggett, Brian L., Solomon, Scott D., Gislason, Gunnar H., Køber, Lars, Landray, Martin J., Sivapalan, Pradeesh, Jensen, Jens Ulrik Stæhr, Biering-Sørensen, Tor
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container_title The Journal of infection
container_volume 89
creator Christensen, Jacob
Johansen, Niklas Dyrby
Janstrup, Kira Hyldekær
Modin, Daniel
Skaarup, Kristoffer Grundtvig
Nealon, Joshua
Samson, Sandrine
Loiacono, Matthew
Harris, Rebecca
Larsen, Carsten Schade
Jensen, Anne Marie Reimer
Landler, Nino Emanuel
Claggett, Brian L.
Solomon, Scott D.
Gislason, Gunnar H.
Køber, Lars
Landray, Martin J.
Sivapalan, Pradeesh
Jensen, Jens Ulrik Stæhr
Biering-Sørensen, Tor
description Morning influenza vaccination enhances antibody response. In this post hoc analysis of the DANFLU-1 trial, we sought to evaluate the association between time of day for vaccination (ToV) and outcomes and whether ToV modified the relative effectiveness of high-dose (QIV-HD) vs. standard-dose (QIV-SD) quadrivalent influenza vaccine. DANFLU-1 was a pragmatic feasibility trial of QIV-HD vs. QIV-SD. Outcomes included hospitalizations and mortality. For subgroup analysis, the population was dichotomized at median ToV into two groups (early and late). The study population included 12,477 participants. Mean age was 71.7 ± 3.9 years with 5877 (47.1%) female participants. Median ToV was 11.29 AM. Earlier ToV was associated with fewer respiratory hospitalizations independent of vaccine type, which persisted in adjusted analysis (IRR 0.88 per 1-hour decrement (95% CI 0.78- 0.98, p = 0.025). No effect modification by continuous or dichotomous ToV was found. In subgroup analysis, effects consistently favored QIV-HD against hospitalizations for pneumonia or influenza (early: IRR 0.30; late: 0.29), all-cause hospitalizations (early: IRR 0.87; late: 0.86), and mortality (early: HR 0.53; late: 0.50). In this exploratory post hoc analysis, earlier ToV was associated with fewer respiratory hospitalizations. The relative effectiveness of QIV-HD vs. QIV-SD was not modified by ToV. Further research is needed to confirm findings. Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT05048589 [Display omitted] •Morning vaccination enhances the antibody response to influenza vaccine.•Post hoc analysis of DANFLU-1; high- (HD) vs. standard-dose (SD) influenza vaccine.•Earlier vaccination was associated with fewer respiratory hospitalizations.•HD compared with SD lowered risk of hospitalizations and mortality in older adults.•Relative effectiveness of HD vs. SD was independent of circadian timing.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jinf.2024.106276
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In this post hoc analysis of the DANFLU-1 trial, we sought to evaluate the association between time of day for vaccination (ToV) and outcomes and whether ToV modified the relative effectiveness of high-dose (QIV-HD) vs. standard-dose (QIV-SD) quadrivalent influenza vaccine. DANFLU-1 was a pragmatic feasibility trial of QIV-HD vs. QIV-SD. Outcomes included hospitalizations and mortality. For subgroup analysis, the population was dichotomized at median ToV into two groups (early and late). The study population included 12,477 participants. Mean age was 71.7 ± 3.9 years with 5877 (47.1%) female participants. Median ToV was 11.29 AM. Earlier ToV was associated with fewer respiratory hospitalizations independent of vaccine type, which persisted in adjusted analysis (IRR 0.88 per 1-hour decrement (95% CI 0.78- 0.98, p = 0.025). No effect modification by continuous or dichotomous ToV was found. In subgroup analysis, effects consistently favored QIV-HD against hospitalizations for pneumonia or influenza (early: IRR 0.30; late: 0.29), all-cause hospitalizations (early: IRR 0.87; late: 0.86), and mortality (early: HR 0.53; late: 0.50). In this exploratory post hoc analysis, earlier ToV was associated with fewer respiratory hospitalizations. The relative effectiveness of QIV-HD vs. QIV-SD was not modified by ToV. Further research is needed to confirm findings. 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subjects Health care
Human
Influenza
Outcome assessment
Pragmatic clinical trial
Vaccination
title Time of day for vaccination, outcomes, and relative effectiveness of high-dose vs. standard-dose quadrivalent influenza vaccine: A post hoc analysis of the DANFLU-1 randomized clinical trial
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