About
The Evidence to Recommendations (EtR) frameworks describe information considered in moving from evidence to ACIP vaccine recommendations.
Summary
Question: Should PCV15 be recommended as an option for pneumococcal conjugate vaccination according to currently recommended dosing and schedules, for U.S. children <2 years of age?
Population: U.S. children <2 years of age
Intervention: PCV15 according to currently recommended pneumococcal conjugate vaccination dosing and schedules
Comparison: PCV13 according to currently recommended dosing and schedules
Main Outcomes: Vaccine-type invasive pneumococcal disease; Vaccine-type non-bacteremic pneumococcal pneumonia; Vaccine-type acute otitis media; Vaccine-type pneumococcal death; Serious adverse events following immunization
Setting: U.S. children <2 years of age
Perspective: Clinical perspective
Background
In June 2022, the Food and Drug Administration approved an expanded usage of 15-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV15 [Merck Sharp & Dohme LLC]) to include children. PCV15 was licensed for use in adults in 2021.
Currently, PCV13 is recommended for routine use in all infants aged <2 years as a 4-dose series at ages 2, 4, 6, and 12–15 months. Catch-up vaccination is recommended through age 59 months for healthy children, and through age 71 months for children with underlying medical conditions. The ACIP Pneumococcal Vaccines Work Group employed the Evidence to Recommendation (EtR) framework, using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach, to guide its deliberations regarding use of PCV15 in U.S. children as an option for pneumococcal conjugate vaccination.
Problem
References in this table:12345
Criteria | Work Group Judgement | Evidence | Additional Considerations |
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Is the problem of public health importance? | Yes | Acute Otitis Media (AOM)
Pneumonia
Invasive pneumococcal disease
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Benefits and Harms
References in this table:678910
Criteria | Work Group Judgement | Evidence | Additional Considerations |
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How substantial are the desirable anticipated effects? | Moderate |
PCV15 vs PCV13 using a 3+1 schedule
Mixed PCV15/PCV13 dosing vs. PCV13 only
Sub-analysis
Sub-analyses findings did not differ substantially from the original findings, except for the analysis of concomitant use of mumps vaccine, in which the percentage point difference in mumps antigen for the PCV15 group versus the PCV13 group missed the non-inferiority criteria (observed lower bound of CI of -5.4, compared to the noninferiority margin of -5.0).PCV15 vs. PCV13 as Catch-up vaccination
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How substantial are the undesirable anticipated effects? | Small |
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Do the desirable effects outweigh the undesirable effects? | Favors both | In comparing PCV15 with PCV13 for routine use in children aged <2 years, the Work Group felt that both interventions are favorable. | |
What is the overall certainty of this evidence for the critical outcomes? | Effectiveness of the intervention: Moderate
Safety of the intervention: Low
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For critical outcomes, the certainty of evidence was moderate for effectiveness and low for safety of the intervention. Certainty of evidence for safety was downgraded twice due to imprecision based on fragility due to few events and a wide confidence interval crossing multiple decision thresholds. |
Values
References in this table:11
Criteria | Work Group Judgement | Evidence | Additional Considerations |
---|---|---|---|
Does the target population feel the desirable effects are large relative to the undesirable effects? | Probably yes |
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The WG members’ interpretation was split between “Yes” and “Probably Yes”. The split in interpretation was due to the uncertainties about the added benefit from and safety of PCV15. |
Is there important uncertainty about or variability in how much people value the main outcomes? | Probably no important uncertainty or variability |
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Acceptability
References in this table:12
Criteria | Work Group Judgement | Evidence | Additional Considerations |
---|---|---|---|
Is the intervention acceptable to key stakeholders? | Probably yes |
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Resource Use
References in this table:13
Criteria | Work Group Judgement | Evidence | Additional Considerations |
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Is the intervention a reasonable and efficient allocation of resources? | Probably yes |
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Equity
References in this table:141516171819
Criteria | Work Group Judgement | Evidence | Additional Considerations |
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What would be the impact on health equity? | Probably no impact | Disease Burden
Vaccine Coverage
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Feasibility
Criteria | Work Group Judgement | Evidence | Additional Considerations |
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Is the intervention feasible to implement? | Probably yes |
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