Publication date: May 27, 2025
Mpox is a viral illness for which the MVA-BN vaccine was authorized during the 2022 global outbreak. Although initial studies reported high immunogenicity, real-world evidence on vaccine effectiveness (VE) remains scarce. This study aimed to estimate the real-world VE of at least one dose of the MVA-BN vaccine against symptomatic mpox in adults tested at a tertiary hospital in Barcelona, Spain. We conducted a test-negative case-control study between July 2022 and December 2023. Adults tested for mpox by PCR were included. Cases were PCR-positive; controls were PCR-negative. Vaccine effectiveness of at least one dose was calculated as (1 – adjusted odds ratio) cD7 100 %, using multivariable logistic regression. Among 301 participants, 126 were cases and 175 controls. Crude VE of ≥1 dose ≥14 days before testing was 47 % (95 % CI: -17 % to 77 %). After adjusting for sex, age, testing center, sexually transmitted infection (STI) testing in the last year and risk criteria for mpox VE increased to 74 % (95 % CI: 38 % to 90 %) but decreased to 44 % (95 % CI: -52 % to 79 %) when additionally adjusting for epidemiological weeks. Similar patterns were observed in a subgroup of men with at least one risk criteria for mpox. Our study provides context-specific evidence on the effectiveness of a single MVA-BN vaccine dose against symptomatic mpox in a real-world setting. Vaccine effectiveness estimates varied depending on adjustment strategy, highlighting the importance of accounting for epidemiological weeks to avoid overestimation.
Concepts | Keywords |
---|---|
December | Inmunization strategy |
July | Mpox |
Mba | Vaccine effectiveness |
Overestimation | |
Vaccine |
Semantics
Type | Source | Name |
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disease | MESH | sexually transmitted infection |