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Randomized Trial of BCG Vaccine to Protect against Covid-19 in Health Care Workers

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posted on 2025-08-01, 17:02 authored by LF Pittet, NL Messina, F Orsini, CL Moore, V Abruzzo, S Barry, R Bonnici, M Bonten, J Campbell, J Croda, M Dalcolmo, K Gardiner, G Gell, S Germano, A Gomes-Silva, C Goodall, A Gwee, T Jamieson, B Jardim, TR Kollmann, MVG Lacerda, KJ Lee, M Lucas, DJ Lynn, L Manning, HS Marshall, E McDonald, CF Munns, S Nicholson, A O'Connell, RD de Oliveira, S Perlen, KP Perrett, C Prat-Aymerich, PC Richmond, J Rodriguez-Baño, G Dos Santos, PV da Silva, JW Teo, P Villanueva, A Warris, NJ Wood, A Davidson, N Curtis
BACKGROUND: The bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine has immunomodulatory "off-target" effects that have been hypothesized to protect against coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19). METHODS: In this international, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, we randomly assigned health care workers to receive the BCG-Denmark vaccine or saline placebo and followed them for 12 months. Symptomatic Covid-19 and severe Covid-19, the primary outcomes, were assessed at 6 months; the primary analyses involved the modified intention-to-treat population, which was restricted to participants with a negative test for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 at baseline. RESULTS: A total of 3988 participants underwent randomization; recruitment ceased before the planned sample size was reached owing to the availability of Covid-19 vaccines. The modified intention-to-treat population included 84.9% of the participants who underwent randomization: 1703 in the BCG group and 1683 in the placebo group. The estimated risk of symptomatic Covid-19 by 6 months was 14.7% in the BCG group and 12.3% in the placebo group (risk difference, 2.4 percentage points; 95% confidence interval [CI], -0.7 to 5.5; P = 0.13). The risk of severe Covid-19 by 6 months was 7.6% in the BCG group and 6.5% in the placebo group (risk difference, 1.1 percentage points; 95% CI, -1.2 to 3.5; P = 0.34); the majority of participants who met the trial definition of severe Covid-19 were not hospitalized but were unable to work for at least 3 consecutive days. In supplementary and sensitivity analyses that used less conservative censoring rules, the risk differences were similar but the confidence intervals were narrower. There were five hospitalizations due to Covid-19 in each group (including one death in the placebo group). The hazard ratio for any Covid-19 episode in the BCG group as compared with the placebo group was 1.23 (95% CI, 0.96 to 1.59). No safety concerns were identified. CONCLUSIONS: Vaccination with BCG-Denmark did not result in a lower risk of Covid-19 among health care workers than placebo. (Funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and others; BRACE ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04327206.).

Funding

1127984

1155066

1194694

1197117

2008911

Australian National Health and Medical Research Council

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

COV-001

Calvert-Jones Foundation

EMBL Australia

Epworth HealthCare

Health Services Union NSW

INV-017302

Insurance Advisernet Foundation

MR/N006364/2

Medical Research Council (MRC)

Minderoo Foundation

Modara Pines Charitable Foundation

NAB Foundation

P2GEP3_178155

Peter Sowerby Foundation

Royal Children’s Hospital Foundation

SA Health

Sarah and Lachlan Murdoch

Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)

UHG Foundation

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© 2023 Massachusetts Medical Society. This version is made available under the CC-BY-ND 4.0 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the Massachusetts Medical Society via the DOI in this record A data sharing statement provided by the authors is available with the full text of this article at NEJM.org

Journal

New England Journal of Medicine

Pagination

1582-1596

Publisher

Massachusetts Medical Society

Place published

United States

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2023-06-15T11:08:11Z

FOA date

2023-06-15T11:23:03Z

Citation

Vol. 388(17), pp. 1582-1596

Department

  • Health and Community Sciences

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