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For infants born from October to February, maternal vaccination was cost-effective, but compared with vaccination, nirsevimab ...
The study found the program was more than 85% effective in reducing infant hospitalizations, emergency-room consultations and ...
Nirsevimab and the maternal vaccine for respiratory syncytial virus can reduce health care costs and productivity losses associated with RSV but lead to higher overall spending, according to ...
Despite adequate availability of nirsevimab, only about one third of eligible children receive it for respiratory syncytial ...
Nirsevimab is effective for protecting infants against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)-associated lower respiratory tract ...
Nirsevimab may not be the only option for preventing the infection this fall. The FDA is weighing whether to approve Pfizer’s vaccine for pregnant women that would also protect babies.
Meanwhile, 0.1% of infants in the nirsevimab group and 0.5% of infants in the standard care group were hospitalized for very severe RSV-associated lower respiratory tract infection, with an ...
Like nirsevimab, it’s an antibody that can reduce infections with the virus—but unlike nirsevimab, which is just a single shot, palivzumab requires monthly injections throughout the RSV season.
Nirsevimab, a monoclonal antibody to the RSV fusion protein being developed by AstraZeneca and Sanofi, has an extended half-life, which may allow one dose to confer protection throughout a season.
Amid an ongoing shortage of nirsevimab, an RSV immunization for young children, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has announced that more than 77,000 additional doses will be ...
In a logistic regression model, nirsevimab was estimated to be 83% effective in preventing hospitalization from RSV bronchiolitis (95% CI 73.4-89.2) in infants younger than 12 months of age, Naim ...
Nirsevimab may not be the only option for preventing the infection this fall. The FDA is weighing whether to approve Pfizer’s vaccine for pregnant women that would also protect babies.