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Effectiveness And Impact Of Nirsevimab In Chile (NIRSE-CL)

I

Instituto Sistemas Complejos de Ingeniería

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

RSV

Treatments

Biological: Nirsevimab

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06511687
ISCI00000001

Details and patient eligibility

About

The Nirse-CL study is a collaborative effort between the Ministry of Health of Chile, Instituto Sistemas Complejos de Ingeniería (ISCI), and the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Chile. The primary aim is to determine the effectiveness of the monoclonal antibody nirsevimab in preventing RSV infection in infants based on the integrated analysis of several national databases before, during, and after the implementation of a universal immunization program. The impact of the program on RSV-related health outcomes will also be determined.

Full description

The primary aim of NirseCL is to evaluate the effectiveness of nirsevimab against Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) in infants during the 2024 RSV season in Chile. The secondary objective is to determine the impact on RSV-related health outcomes at a national level.

The target population to receive nirsevimab is approximately 160,000 subjects, including the entire newborn cohort born during the autumn-winter season, from April 1st, 2024, to September 31st, 2024, infants born from October 1st, 2023, to March 31st, 2024, which are 6 to 1 month old at the time of immunization in April-June, and the high-risk group defined as infants born with 29 weeks of gestational age (wga) or less who were born within nine months of the beginning of the RSV season; those born with Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia (BPD), 32 or less wga and/or a birth weight less than 1·5 kgs born within one year of the beginning of the RSV season, and newborns 34 or less wga and/or weight less than 2·5 kgs born during the RSV season.

Nirsevimab will be administered as part of Chile's national immunization program, following the implementation plan designed by the Ministry of Health. The coverage with nirsevimab in the target population is expected to be high (95% for those born during the winter campaign and 80% for those born before the beginning of the autumn-winter season).

The primary outcome measure for effectiveness will be lower-tract respiratory infection hospitalizations (LRTI) attributed to RSV in the pediatric intensive care units (PICU) at a nationwide and regional level, and the secondary outcomes will be overall LRTI hospitalizations attributed to RSV, LRTI hospitalizations, and hospitalizations due to any cause. Additional outcomes might be included if enough statistical power is attained.

Effectiveness will be determined using a two-step process. First, historical data will be used to determine the set of ICD10 diagnosis codes that are attributable to RSV infection by using data from the Chilean national sentinel program and consolidated hospitalization records. Afterward, A series of complementary statistical analyses at different aggregation levels will be conducted to estimate the impact of nirsevimab on the target population. Detailed patient-level information will be used to compare LRTI hospitalizations of those receiving the immunization against those who did not, using an adjusted proportional hazard rates regression model to estimate the effectiveness of nirsevimab as a function of covariates such as wga, weight at birth, sex, nationality, maternal education, coexisting conditions, MMR vaccination (as an indicator of access to medical care), and place of birth. This method has been used to evaluate recent nationwide vaccination campaigns in Chile (Jara et al, 2021). A case-control matching approach will be used as an alternative method intended to gain statistical efficiency (Rose and van der Laan, 2009). Finally, as a robustness analysis, a synthetic control method that allows the comparison of whole time series without relying on individual-level data will be used (Bruhn et al., 2016).

Enrollment

160,000 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

Under 4 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Subjects born between October 1st, 2023, to September 31st, 2024.
  • Subjects born with 29 weeks of gestational age (wga) or less who were born between July 1st, 2023 and October 1st, 2023
  • Subjects born with Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia (BPD), 32 or less wga and/or a birth weight less than 1·5 kgs born between April 1st, 2023 and October 1st, 2023.

Exclusion criteria

  • No specific criteria has been reported

Trial design

160,000 participants in 3 patient groups

Newborns
Description:
Subjects born between April 1st, and September 31st in 2024
Treatment:
Biological: Nirsevimab
Catch-up
Description:
Subjects born between October 1st of 2023 and March 31st of 2024
Treatment:
Biological: Nirsevimab
High-risk
Description:
High-Risk Cohort: Infants born with 29 weeks of gestational age (wga) or less who were born within nine months of the beginning of the RSV season; those born with Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia (BPD), 32 or less wga and/or a birth weight less than 1·5 kgs born within one year of the beginning of the RSV season, and newborns 34 or less wga and/or weight less than 2·5 kgs born during the RSV season.
Treatment:
Biological: Nirsevimab

Trial contacts and locations

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Central trial contact

Leonardo Basso, PhD in Business Administration

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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