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Bacille Calmette-Guérin vaccination to prevent febrile and respiratory illness in adults (BRACE): secondary outcomes of a randomised controlled phase 3 trial.

journal contribution
posted on 2025-09-10, 04:36 authored by Laure PittetLaure Pittet, Nicole MessinaNicole Messina, Ellie McDonald, Francesca OrsiniFrancesca Orsini, Simone Barry, Marc Bonten, John Campbell, Julio Croda, Mariana G Croda, Margareth Dalcolmo, Kaya Gardiner, Amanda GweeAmanda Gwee, Bruno Jardim, Marcus VG Lacerda, Michaela Lucas, David J Lynn, Laurens Manning, Kirsten PerrettKirsten Perrett, Jeffrey J Post, Cristina Prat-Aymerich, Peter C Richmond, Jorge L Rocha, Jesus Rodriguez-Baño, Adilia Warris, Nicholas J Wood, Andrew Davidson, Richard CurtisRichard Curtis, BRACE Trial Consortium Group
BACKGROUND: Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccination has off-target (non-specific) effects that are associated with protection against unrelated infections and decreased all-cause mortality in infants. We aimed to determine whether BCG vaccination prevents febrile and respiratory infections in adults. METHODS: This randomised controlled phase 3 trial was done in 36 healthcare centres in Australia, Brazil, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United Kingdom. Healthcare workers were randomised to receive BCG-Denmark (single 0.1 ml intradermal injection) or no BCG in a 1:1 ratio using a web-based procedure, stratified by stage, site, age, and presence of co-morbidity. The difference in occurrence of febrile or respiratory illness were measured over 12 months (prespecified secondary outcome) using the intention-to-treat (ITT) population. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04327206. FINDINGS: Between March 30, 2020, and April 1, 2021, 6828 healthcare workers were randomised to BCG-Denmark (n = 3417) or control (n = 3411; no intervention or placebo) groups. The 12-month adjusted estimated risk of ≥1 episode of febrile or respiratory illness was 66.8% in the BCG group (95% CI 65.3%-68.2%), compared with 63.4% in the control group (95% CI 61.8%-65.0%), a difference of +3.4 percentage points (95% CI +1.3% to +5.5%; p 0.002). The adjusted estimated risk of a severe episode (defined as being incapacitated for ≥3 consecutive days or hospitalised) was 19.4% in the BCG group (95% CI 18.0%-20.7%), compared with 18.8% in the control group (95% CI 17.4%-20.2%) a difference of +0.6 percentage points (95% CI -1.3% to +2.5%; p 0.6). Both groups had a similar number of episodes of illness, pneumonia, and hospitalisation. There were three deaths, all in the control group. There were no safety concerns following BCG vaccination. INTERPRETATION: In contrast to the beneficial off-target effects reported following neonatal BCG in infants, a small increased risk of symptomatic febrile or respiratory illness was observed in the 12 months following BCG vaccination in adults. There was no evidence of a difference in the risk of severe disease. FUNDING: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Minderoo Foundation, Sarah and Lachlan Murdoch, the Royal Children's Hospital Foundation, Health Services Union NSW, the Peter Sowerby Foundation, SA Health, the Insurance Advisernet Foundation, the NAB Foundation, the Calvert-Jones Foundation, the Modara Pines Charitable Foundation, the UHG Foundation Pty Ltd, Epworth Healthcare, the National Health and Medical Research Council, the Swiss National Science Foundation and individual donors.

Funding

Improving the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of infectious diseases in children : National Health and Medical Research Council | 1197117

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    ISSN - Is published in 2589-5370 (EClinicalMedicine)
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Pagination

102616-

Volume

72

Publisher

Elsevier

Journal

EClinicalMedicine

Language

eng

Location

England

Medium

Electronic-eCollection

Number

102616

PII

S2589-5370(24)00195-0

Publisher licence

CC BY

Online publication date

2024-05-13

Publication date

2024-06-01

Associated identifiers

grant.9143731 (dimensions-grant-id)

Publication status

  • Published online