Guillain-Barre Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Risk of Guillain-Barré Syndrome Following Meningococcal Conjugate (MCV4) Vaccination
We are conducting a large, record-based study to assess the risk of Guillain-Barré Syndrome
(GBS), a serious demyelinating disease, following immunization with the tetravalent
meningococcal conjugate vaccine (Menactra) that is currently recommended for all
adolescents. The study was requested by CDC and FDA because of an unexpected number of case
reports to the CDC's Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS).
The study protocol was designed by the investigators, with input from FDA, CDC, and the
vaccine's manufacturer, Sanofi-Pasteur. An external advisory board that includes CDC
representation, provides input regarding important decisions. The manufacturer is not
participating in the conduct of the study and has no control over the analysis or
dissemination of results.
The study is derived from five large US health plans with a total membership of
approximately 50 million over the study time period. America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP)
serves as liaison between the health plans and the Coordinating Center at the Department of
Ambulatory Care and Prevention of Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care,
and is the contracting organization with the health plans.
Through a partnership that uses the data and other resources of three national and two
regional health plans and insurers, we are conducting a multi-site retrospective study of
the relationship between immunization with tetravalent meningococcal conjugate vaccine
(MCV4) and Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) in adolescents (ages 11-21 years of age) over the
42-month period of March 1, 2005 to August 31, 2008. This collaboration has several features
of a distributed data network, and so provides an instructive example of the feasibility of
large scale population-based post-market evidence development.
Participants include five research organizations that are either part of, or closely
affiliated with, a health plan or insurer: HealthCore Inc. (affiliated with WellPoint),
Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield of Pennsylvania, i3 Drug Safety, Aetna, Inc., and Kaiser
Permanente Center for Health Research of Hawaii. There is a coordinating center at the
Harvard Medical School Department of Ambulatory Care and Prevention at Harvard Pilgrim
Health Care.
The organizations provide coverage for approximately 80 million individuals (all ages), of
whom the information for approximately 50 million will be available for analysis. Each
organization provides scientific, informatics, and management expertise regarding its own
population and data, and the overall design and conduct of the study.
This retrospective study uses a hybrid design with three analytic components: 1)
characterization of the entire cohort with regard to demographics, eligible time under
observation, immunization status, incidence rates of GBS during various categories of person
time (never immunized, before immunization, during the 42 days after immunization, etc.),
and comorbidities and other covariates, 2) a nested case-control study assessing risk
associated with immunization, and 3) a self-controlled case series assessing immunization
associated risk.
Cohort analysis
Sites will use programs distributed by the coordinating center to compute incidence rates of
GBS according to age, sex, season, and MCV4 vaccination status among the full base
population (health plan enrollees who meet age and cohort eligibility criteria).
Additionally, vaccination rates for MCV4 according to age, sex, and calendar year will be
computed among all cohort members. Incidence rates of GBS provided by these analyses will be
used to calculate the attributable risk of GBS following MCV4 vaccination should a
significant relationship be identified.
Nested case control analysis
A nested case-control analysis utilizing pooled analytic datasets from all sites will be
used to estimate the risk of GBS during the 42 days after MCV4 vaccination relative to the
risk of GBS among vaccines and non-vaccinees at other times (the study's primary objective),
adjusted for age, sex, and other vaccinations among 11-<19 year olds.
All potential cases of GBS among the cohort members will be identified, and a sample of 100
non-cases from the same risk set as each case will be randomly selected and matched on age,
sex, and state of residence. Their vaccination histories and other covariates will be
included in analytic datasets to be transferred to the coordinating center for pooled
multivariate analysis. Covariates will be estimated as of an index date assigned within each
case-control set which is the date of GBS onset for the associated case.
The relative risk of GBS associated with MCV4 vaccination will be estimated using
conditional logistic regression analysis in SAS.
Variables will include:
- Dependent variable: GBS case status
- Main independent variable: Analysis A: MCV4 vaccination in 1-42 days prior to index
date; Analysis B: MCV4 vaccination in 1-7, 8-14, 15-28, 29-42 days prior to index date
- Matching factors: Age; sex; study site; state of residence
- Other covariates: Exposure to Tdap, Td, Hepatitis B, HPV, tetanus, and influenza
vaccine during the 42 days prior to the GBS onset date; exposure to MPSV4 vaccine
during the 42 days prior to the GBS onset date(separate model from model with MCV4
exposure)
We also will assess the potential effect modification between the different vaccines, and
according to age, season, and geographic region, through stratified analysis and the testing
of interaction terms within the conditional logistic regression model.
Self-Control Analysis
An additional case-series analysis (to be referred to as "Analysis C") will be performed
among the subset of adjudicated GBS cases with prior MCV4 vaccination. Date of MCV4
vaccination will serve as the index date for each patient. The relative incidence rate of
GBS during a "control" period of 43 or more days following vaccination will be compared to
the incidence during the "exposed" risk window of 1-42 days following vaccination using log
linear modeling with terms for the exposed and control periods.
Variables will include:
- Dependent variable: Time to GBS
- Main independent variable: Analysis C: Time period 1-42 days post vaccination compared
with 43 or more days post vaccination
- Other covariates (to be included as sample size permits): Time periods corresponding to
1-42 days following each of: Tdap, Td, Hepatitis B, HPV, tetanus, and influenza
vaccinations
We also will assess the potential effect modification between the different vaccines, and
according to age, season, geographic region, and race/ethnicity, through stratified analysis
and the testing of interaction terms within the log linear model, as sample size permits.
Analysis C will be performed once at the end of the study period.
GBS Case Descriptive Analysis
Several additional secondary objectives will be addressed from evaluation of GBS cases based
on review of abstracted information from their medical charts, and administrative claims
data.
Cases of GBS identified among cohort members 19-<22 years old will be identified from
administrative claims data, and adjudicated through review of abstracted medical record
information in a manner equivalent to that for cohort members 11-<19 years old. These cases
will be quantified, and their clinical presentation described and compared with that of
cases among 11-<19 year olds, with regard to at least the following factors: proportion of
cases classified as definite GBS cases, severity of illness as measured by mortality,
hospitalization for GBS, total duration of hospitalizations in days, mechanical ventilation
required, total number of days of mechanical ventilation, intravenous immunoglobulin
therapy, plasmapheresis, and immunosuppressive therapy. Similar comparisons will be made
regarding the clinical presentation of GBS among MCV4 vaccinees compared to non-vaccinees.
The number of GBS cases with history of each of the other vaccines included in the study in
the 42 days prior to GBS onset will also be described.
A line list will be created for all potential cases of GBS. For adjudicated cases of GBS,
the listing will indicate the final case status, elements of the case definition that were
and were not met, immunization status (MCV4, MPSV4, Tdap, Td, HepB, HPV, tetanus, and
influenza) and indicators of infection or febrile illness in the prior 42 days, gender, age,
month and year of GBS onset, and a brief description of disease severity. Additional line
lists will be created for censored cases (adjudicated non-cases) that include the reason for
censoring, and for potential cases for which charts could not be obtained or insufficient
information was obtained from the chart to adjudicate case status.
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