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180-day efficacy of nirsevimab against hospitalisation for respiratory syncytial virus lower respiratory tract infections in infants (HARMONIE) a randomised, controlled, phase 3b trial

180-day efficacy of nirsevimab against hospitalisation for respiratory syncytial virus lower respiratory tract infections in infants (HARMONIE) a randomised, controlled, phase 3b trial
180-day efficacy of nirsevimab against hospitalisation for respiratory syncytial virus lower respiratory tract infections in infants (HARMONIE) a randomised, controlled, phase 3b trial

Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a leading cause of lower respiratory tract infection and hospitalisations in infants worldwide. The primary analyses of HARMONIE showed that nirsevimab reduced infant hospitalisations due to RSV-associated lower respiratory tract infection through the RSV season. This analysis aims to evaluate nirsevimab's efficacy at 180 days after dosing, a period exceeding the typical 5-month RSV season. Methods: HARMONIE is an ongoing, open-label, parallel arm, randomised, controlled, phase 3b study conducted in France, Germany, and the UK. Infants aged 12 months or younger, born at a gestational age of at least 29 weeks, were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either a single intramuscular dose of nirsevimab (50 mg for children <5 kg or 100 mg for children ≥5 kg) or standard care (without RSV prophylaxis) before or during their first RSV season. Randomisation was electronically done, stratified by country and age-group. The primary efficacy endpoint for this analysis was the incidence of hospitalisations due to RSV-associated lower respiratory tract infection up to 180 days after nirsevimab administration or randomisation in all randomised participants. Safety up to 365 days following nirsevimab administration was also assessed. This trial is ongoing and registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT05437510. Findings: Between Aug 8, 2022, and Feb 28, 2023, 8057 infants were randomly assigned to either the nirsevimab group (n=4038) or the standard care group (n=4019). The median age at randomisation was 4·00 months (IQR 1·0–7·0; range 0·0–12·0, and 4195 (52·1%) were male and 3862 (47·9%) were female. Up to 180 days, 12 (0·3%) of 4038 infants in the nirsevimab group and 68 (1·7%) of 4019 infants in the standard care group had been hospitalised for RSV-associated lower respiratory tract infection, corresponding to a nirsevimab efficacy of 82·7% (95% CI 67·8–91·5; p<0·0001). Most participants experienced grade 1 (2759 [68·7%] of 4016 in the nirsevimab group; 2696 [67·1%] of 4018 in the standard care group) or grade 2 (1447 [36·0%] of 4016 in the nirsevimab group; 1436 [35·7%] of 4018 in the standard care group) treatment-emergent adverse events, and no apparent safety concerns were raised up to 365 days after dosing. Interpretation: Nirsevimab offers consistent and sustained protection against hospitalisation due to RSV-associated lower respiratory tract infection for at least 6 months. This finding provides global health systems greater flexibility when implementing nirsevimab, providing substantial benefit in the ongoing effort to reduce the burden of infant RSV and the potential wider public health value. Funding: Sanofi and AstraZeneca.

2352-4650
404-412
Munro, Alasdair P.S.
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Drysdale, Simon B.
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Cathie, Katrina
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Flamein, Florence
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Knuf, Markus
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Collins, Andrea M.
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Hill, Helen C.
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Kaiser, Friedrich
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Cohen, Robert
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Pinquier, Didier
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Vassilouthis, Natalya C.
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Carreno, Mariana
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Moreau, Catherine
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Bourron, Pierre
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Marcelon, Lydie
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Mari, Karine
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Roberts, Michelle
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Tissières, Pierre
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Royal, Simon
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Faust, Saul N.
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HARMONIE Study Group
Munro, Alasdair P.S.
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Drysdale, Simon B.
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Cathie, Katrina
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Flamein, Florence
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Knuf, Markus
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Collins, Andrea M.
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Hill, Helen C.
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Kaiser, Friedrich
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Cohen, Robert
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Pinquier, Didier
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Vassilouthis, Natalya C.
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Carreno, Mariana
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Moreau, Catherine
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Bourron, Pierre
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Marcelon, Lydie
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Mari, Karine
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Roberts, Michelle
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Tissières, Pierre
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Royal, Simon
b982717b-bd60-44b7-8fe3-0edecbe555e3
Faust, Saul N.
f97df780-9f9b-418e-b349-7adf63e150c1

HARMONIE Study Group (2025) 180-day efficacy of nirsevimab against hospitalisation for respiratory syncytial virus lower respiratory tract infections in infants (HARMONIE) a randomised, controlled, phase 3b trial. The Lancet Child and Adolescent Health, 9 (6), 404-412. (doi:10.1016/S2352-4642(25)00102-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a leading cause of lower respiratory tract infection and hospitalisations in infants worldwide. The primary analyses of HARMONIE showed that nirsevimab reduced infant hospitalisations due to RSV-associated lower respiratory tract infection through the RSV season. This analysis aims to evaluate nirsevimab's efficacy at 180 days after dosing, a period exceeding the typical 5-month RSV season. Methods: HARMONIE is an ongoing, open-label, parallel arm, randomised, controlled, phase 3b study conducted in France, Germany, and the UK. Infants aged 12 months or younger, born at a gestational age of at least 29 weeks, were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either a single intramuscular dose of nirsevimab (50 mg for children <5 kg or 100 mg for children ≥5 kg) or standard care (without RSV prophylaxis) before or during their first RSV season. Randomisation was electronically done, stratified by country and age-group. The primary efficacy endpoint for this analysis was the incidence of hospitalisations due to RSV-associated lower respiratory tract infection up to 180 days after nirsevimab administration or randomisation in all randomised participants. Safety up to 365 days following nirsevimab administration was also assessed. This trial is ongoing and registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT05437510. Findings: Between Aug 8, 2022, and Feb 28, 2023, 8057 infants were randomly assigned to either the nirsevimab group (n=4038) or the standard care group (n=4019). The median age at randomisation was 4·00 months (IQR 1·0–7·0; range 0·0–12·0, and 4195 (52·1%) were male and 3862 (47·9%) were female. Up to 180 days, 12 (0·3%) of 4038 infants in the nirsevimab group and 68 (1·7%) of 4019 infants in the standard care group had been hospitalised for RSV-associated lower respiratory tract infection, corresponding to a nirsevimab efficacy of 82·7% (95% CI 67·8–91·5; p<0·0001). Most participants experienced grade 1 (2759 [68·7%] of 4016 in the nirsevimab group; 2696 [67·1%] of 4018 in the standard care group) or grade 2 (1447 [36·0%] of 4016 in the nirsevimab group; 1436 [35·7%] of 4018 in the standard care group) treatment-emergent adverse events, and no apparent safety concerns were raised up to 365 days after dosing. Interpretation: Nirsevimab offers consistent and sustained protection against hospitalisation due to RSV-associated lower respiratory tract infection for at least 6 months. This finding provides global health systems greater flexibility when implementing nirsevimab, providing substantial benefit in the ongoing effort to reduce the burden of infant RSV and the potential wider public health value. Funding: Sanofi and AstraZeneca.

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Published date: 1 June 2025
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license

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Local EPrints ID: 504209
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504209
ISSN: 2352-4650
PURE UUID: 1229314b-8985-43cc-9403-8a8f644e6057
ORCID for Alasdair P.S. Munro: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4317-0742
ORCID for Katrina Cathie: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5074-0769
ORCID for Saul N. Faust: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3410-7642

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Date deposited: 29 Aug 2025 16:52
Last modified: 30 Aug 2025 02:04

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Contributors

Author: Alasdair P.S. Munro ORCID iD
Author: Simon B. Drysdale
Author: Katrina Cathie ORCID iD
Author: Florence Flamein
Author: Markus Knuf
Author: Andrea M. Collins
Author: Helen C. Hill
Author: Friedrich Kaiser
Author: Robert Cohen
Author: Didier Pinquier
Author: Natalya C. Vassilouthis
Author: Mariana Carreno
Author: Catherine Moreau
Author: Pierre Bourron
Author: Lydie Marcelon
Author: Karine Mari
Author: Michelle Roberts
Author: Pierre Tissières
Author: Simon Royal
Author: Saul N. Faust ORCID iD
Corporate Author: HARMONIE Study Group

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