Murdoch Childrens Research Institute
Browse

Neonatal BCG Vaccination for Prevention of Allergy in Infants: The MIS BAIR Randomised Controlled Trial.

journal contribution
posted on 2025-09-10, 04:38 authored by Nicole MessinaNicole Messina, Kaya GardinerKaya Gardiner, Laure PittetLaure Pittet, Emily K Forbes, Kate FrancisKate Francis, Bridget Freyne, Christel Zufferey, Veronica Abruzzo, Clare Morison, Hannah Turner, Katrina AllenKatrina Allen, Katie L Flanagan, Anne-Louise PonsonbyAnne-Louise Ponsonby, Roy Robins-Browne, Frank Shann, Peter VuillerminPeter Vuillermin, Susan DonathSusan Donath, Dan Casalaz, Richard CurtisRichard Curtis, Melbourne Infant Study: BCG for Allergy and Infection Reduction (MIS BAIR) Group
BACKGROUND: The beneficial off-target effects of Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccination potentially include protection against allergy. OBJECTIVE: In the MIS BAIR trial, we aimed to determine whether neonatal BCG vaccination reduces atopic sensitisation and clinical food allergy in infants. METHODS: In this randomised controlled trial, 1272 neonates were allocated to BCG-Denmark vaccine (0.05 mL intradermal dose) or no BCG at birth. Randomisation was stratified by recruitment site, mode of delivery and plurality of birth. The primary outcome was the incidence of atopic sensitisation determined by skin prick test at 1 year of age. Food allergy was determined by 3-monthly online questionnaires and oral food challenges. Data were analysed by intention-to-treat using binary regression. CLINICALTRIALS: gov (NCT01906853). RESULTS: Atopic sensitisation during the first year of life was 22.9% among infants in the BCG group and 18.9% in the control group (adjusted risk difference (aRD) 3.8% (95% CI -1.5 to 9.1) after multiple imputation). Clinical food allergy was similar between infants in the BCG and control groups (9.8% vs. 9.6%; aRD 0.2, 95% CI -3.4 to 3.8). An interaction was observed between the primary outcome and maternal history of BCG vaccination. No interaction was observed for the additional prespecified potential effect modifiers tested (sex, delivery mode, family history of any allergy, season of birth, hepatitis B vaccination at randomisation, BCG scar and age at BCG administration). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Neonatal BCG-Denmark vaccination does not protect against atopic sensitisation or clinical food allergy in the first year of life.

Funding

BCG immunisation to prevent allergy in children: an intervention trial : National Health and Medical Research Council | 1051228

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

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
  2. 2.
  3. 3.
    URL - Has version Published Version of Record
  4. 4.
  5. 5.
    PMID - Has metadata PubMed 39004434

Pagination

682-693

Volume

54

Publisher

Wiley

Issue

9

Journal

Clin Exp Allergy

Language

eng

Location

England

Medium

Print-Electronic

Publisher licence

CC BY

Online publication date

2024-07-14

Publication date

2024-09-01

Associated identifiers

grant.9143731 (dimensions-grant-id)

Publication status

  • Published