(Press-News.org) One dose of modified vaccinia Ankara-Bavarian Nordic (MVA-BN) smallpox vaccine is moderately effective in preventing mpox infection and should be made available to communities at risk, finds a study published by The BMJ today.
With mpox infections rising again across the globe, the researchers say these findings “strengthen the evidence that MVA-BN is effective at preventing mpox infection and should be made available and accessible to communities at risk.”
No randomised clinical trials of vaccination against mpox have been conducted. Estimates of the effectiveness of a single dose of vaccination from observational studies range from 36% to 86%, but observational data can be prone to bias, which can lead to inaccurate or misleading results.
To address this, researchers set out to estimate the real world effectiveness of one dose of MVA-BN against mpox infection using a technique called target trial emulation. This applies the design principles of randomised trials to observational data to estimate the causal effect of an intervention, while reducing the biases common to observational studies.
Their findings are based on men aged at least 18 years, with a history of being tested for syphilis and a laboratory confirmed bacterial sexually transmitted infection (STI) in the previous year, or who filled a prescription for preventative HIV treatment in the previous year.
A total of 3,204 men who received the vaccine were matched to 3,204 unvaccinated controls. Over the study period of 153 days, 71 mpox infections were diagnosed, 21 in the vaccinated group (a rate of 0.09 per 1000 person days) and 50 in the unvaccinated group (a rate of 0.20 per 1000 person days).
The relative risk of infection in the vaccinated compared with the unvaccinated group was 0.42, thus the estimated vaccine effectiveness of one dose of MVA-BN against mpox infection was 58%.
The researchers acknowledge that rigorous matching led to a smaller sample size and they could not evaluate a two dose regimen or duration of protection. Information on previous smallpox vaccination, sexual exposures, and individual level measures of social determinants of health were also lacking.
However, results are based on reliable data from a publicly funded healthcare system, and were similar after further analysis to account for other potentially influential factors, providing greater confidence in the conclusions.
The researchers therefore conclude that in the absence of randomised clinical trials, “our findings strengthen the evidence that MVA-BN is effective at preventing mpox infection and should be made available and accessible to communities at risk.”
[Ends]
END
One dose of smallpox vaccine moderately effective in preventing mpox infection
Vaccine should be made available to communities at risk, say researchers
2024-09-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
More than half of UK government nutrition advisors are paid by food companies
2024-09-11
More than half of the experts on the UK government’s nutrition advisory panel have links to the food industry, reveals an investigation by The BMJ today.
At least 11 of the 17 members of the Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition (SACN) have conflicts of interest with the likes of Nestle, sugar manufacturer Tate and Lyle, and the world’s largest ice cream producer, Unilever, reports freelance journalist Sophie Borland.
And at least six out of the 11 members of SACN’s Subgroup on Maternal and Child Nutrition have ties to food firms, including baby food manufacturers and formula milk brands.
SACN ...
Shorter-course radiation better option for breast cancer patients than conventional schedule
2024-09-11
Giving higher doses per fraction of radiation therapy over a shorter time after breast cancer surgery significantly reduces the risk of side effects and improves quality of life compared with a conventional schedule, finds a study published by The BMJ today.
Although survival and recurrence rates were similar, this approach, known as hypofractionation, is safer, more convenient for patients, and reduces costs for healthcare systems, and should be the preferred treatment option, say the researchers.
Conventional fractionation radiation therapy has been the standard of care for most patients with breast ...
Obesity treatments being restricted by cash poor local services
2024-09-11
Obesity treatments are being restricted by cash poor local services across England with many patients being denied specialist drugs, surgery and support, an investigation by The BMJ has found.
Patients in nearly half the country can’t get appointments with specialist teams for weight loss support and care, including treatment with drugs such as semaglutide. And in nearly one in five local health areas, patients don’t have access to a bariatric surgery service, reports Elisabeth Mahase.
The government estimates that obesity costs the NHS in England around £6.5bn a year and is the second biggest preventable cause ...
Laughter may be as effective as drops for dry eyes
2024-09-11
Laughter may be as effective as eye drops in improving symptoms of dry eye disease, finds a clinical trial from China published by The BMJ today
The researchers suggest that laughter exercise could be an initial treatment for relieving symptoms of dry eye disease.
Dry eye disease (DED) is a chronic condition estimated to affect around 360 million individuals worldwide. Common symptoms include uncomfortable, red, scratchy or irritated eyes.
Evidence suggests that laughter therapy alleviates depression, anxiety, stress, and chronic pain, while strengthening immune ...
Path to prosperity for planet and people if Earth’s critical resources are better shared: report
2024-09-11
Earth will only remain able to provide even a basic standard of living for everyone in the future if economic systems and technologies are dramatically transformed and critical resources are more fairly used, managed and shared, according to an international research team including scientists from The Australian National University (ANU).
The report, published in The Lancet Planetary Health, outlines how cities and businesses have the power to play a crucial role and become the “stewards” of critical Earth ...
Long-course radiotherapy is better than short-course for organ preservation in rectal cancer
2024-09-11
The COVID-19 pandemic has enabled researchers to show that a long course of radiotherapy given before surgery may be a better treatment for avoiding surgery, preserving the rectum and anus, and preventing regrowth of the primary tumour than a short course of radiotherapy for patients with rectal cancer – a type of bowel cancer. However, the overall survival and survival free of recurrence of the disease remained the same for both treatments.
These findings are from a new study published in ...
Large-scale population analysis confirms reassuring safety profile of tirzepatide
2024-09-11
As more people with type 2 diabetes (T2D) are taking medications to help manage blood sugar levels and weight loss, concerns about whether these drugs are safe have emerged. Now real-world evidence from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) database reveals a reassuring safety profile for tirzepatide (TZP).
The findings to be presented at this year’s Annual Meeting of The European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD), Madrid (9-13 Sept), and published in the The Journal of Endocrinological Investigation (link below) reveal that, compared to the widely used class of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs), TZP has similar gastrointestinal ...
Tirzepatide associated with greater weight loss in women than men
2024-09-11
All doses of tirzepatide, a medication approved in the EU to treat type 2 diabetes and obesity, consistently reduced body weight in women and men, but women experienced greater weight loss, according to new post hoc research to be presented at this year’s Annual Meeting of The European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD), Madrid (9-13 Sept).
The post hoc analysis, which included the four SURMOUNT trials [1], compared tirzepatide with a placebo for up to 72 to 88 weeks in 4,677 adults (2,999 females, 1,678 males) living with obesity, highlighting potential sex differences in the response.
Tirzepatide, a once-weekly glucose-dependent ...
Rapid control of blood sugar levels in women with gestational diabetes can reverse the risk of their children developing obesity, US study finds
2024-09-11
Swiftly achieving glycaemic control after a diagnosis of gestational diabetes can bring the baby’s risk obesity in childhood down to a level similar to that of children whose mothers did not have gestational diabetes, new research being presented at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Madrid, Spain (9-13 September), has found.
Gestational diabetes, a type of diabetes that can develop during pregnancy, affects 14% of pregnant women globally and is becoming more common, with those who are living with obesity, have a family ...
Semaglutide’s cardiovascular benefits are maintained in people with impaired kidney function
2024-09-11
The anti-obesity medication semaglutide may help to prevent heart attacks, strokes, and other major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) as well as death in adults with overweight or obesity who don’t have diabetes, whether or not they also have impaired kidney function, according to new research to be presented at this year’s Annual Meeting of The European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD), Madrid (9-13 Sept).
The results are based on a pre-specified analysis of the SELECT trial which found that adults with overweight or obesity but not diabetes taking semaglutide for more than 3 years had a 20% lower risk of MACE or ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Arthropods dominate plant litter decomposition in drylands
World-renowned organic chemists attend inaugural science symposium hosted by Rice’s Global Paris Center
The trees of Miami’s future
MIT team takes a major step toward fully 3D-printed active electronics
Accelerated three-year medical school students perform as well as peers in traditional four-year programs
SwRI-developed instruments will study potential habitability of Jupiter’s moon Europa
Proposed scoring system may enhance equity in organ transplantation, increase transplant rates and improve patient survival
Survivors of childhood brain cancer are more likely to be held back in school
Updating offshore turbine designs to reflect storms’ complexity is key
Hospital strain during the COVID-19 pandemic and outcomes in older racial and ethnic minority adults
Scientists unveils key role of “selfish DNA” in early human development
Bonobos may be more vulnerable than previously thought, suggests genetics study
Scripps Research scientists discover chemical probes for previously “undruggable” cancer target
Giant Magellan telescope begins primary mirror support system testing
Experimental cancer drug eliminates bone metastases caused by breast cancer in lab models
Political candidates who fight climate change stand to benefit in election
Stand up to Cancer announces new grants supporting pioneering research in six cancer types
Researchers awarded $1.3M to help military Veterans battling Acute Myeloid Leukemia
New hub for high-energy astrophysics — CTAO Science Data Management Centre opens at DESY in Zeuthen
JMIR publications CEO and Executive Editor Gunther Eysenbach achieves #1 ranking as most cited researcher in Medical Informatics for fifth consecutive year
ERC grant for groundbreaking wearable health tech
NIH announces winners of prize competition to improve postpartum maternal health and health equity through innovative diagnostics
APS and SPR honor Dr. Cynthia F. Bearer with the 2025 Mary Ellen Avery Neonatal Research Award
Election delays and voter trust
US air pollution monitoring network has gaps in coverage, say researchers
Continuous monitoring of fatigue in factory workers
Farmer ants’ wearable bacteria
Political polarization and trust
Study uncovers how silkworm moth's odor detection may improve robotics
New study links obesity to elevated hypertension risk among young middle eastern women
[Press-News.org] One dose of smallpox vaccine moderately effective in preventing mpox infectionVaccine should be made available to communities at risk, say researchers