P-1472. Comparable Vaccine Effectiveness of Adjuvanted and High-Dose Influenza Vaccines in Preventing Test-Confirmed Influenza Outcomes, including Hospitalization, in Overall and High-Risk Older Adults: A Test-Negative Design Study During 2022-2023 and 2023-2024
Mahrukh Imran, Benjamin Chastek, Tim Bancroft, Noah Webb, Stephen I Pelton, Mendel Haag, Ian McGovern

TL;DR
This study found that two types of flu vaccines for older adults, adjuvanted and high-dose, are equally effective in preventing flu and hospitalizations.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence on the comparable effectiveness of adjuvanted and high-dose influenza vaccines in older adults during two recent flu seasons.
Findings
Adjuvanted and high-dose vaccines showed similar effectiveness in preventing test-confirmed influenza in any setting.
Both vaccines were equally effective in preventing hospitalizations among high-risk older adults.
Results were consistent across two flu seasons (2022–23 and 2023–24).
Abstract
In 2022, the US Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommended adults ≥65 years receive adjuvanted or higher-dose influenza vaccines. Increased uptake following this recommendation enabled the estimation of season-specific relative vaccine effectiveness (rVE) using a test-negative design (TND). A 2022–23 season TND study found comparable effectiveness of adjuvanted (aQIV) and high-dose quadrivalent influenza vaccine (HD-QIV) against test-confirmed influenza. Expanding on prior evidence, this study evaluated the rVE of aQIV vs. HD-QIV in preventing test-confirmed influenza during 2023–24, including hospitalizations in overall and high-risk older adults in a pooled analysis with 2022–23.Figure 1.Study Design.Figure 2.Adjusted rVE of aQIV vs. HD-QIV in preventing test-confirmed influenza. Study Design. Adjusted rVE of aQIV vs. HD-QIV in preventing test-confirmed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfluenza Virus Research Studies · Respiratory viral infections research · Immune responses and vaccinations
