COVID-19 Evidence Alerts
from McMaster PLUSTM

Current best evidence for clinical care (more info)

Primary Prevention Sadoff J, Gray G, Vandebosch A, et al. Safety and Efficacy of Single-Dose Ad26.COV2.S Vaccine against Covid-19. N Engl J Med. 2021 Jun 10;384(23):2187-2201. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa2101544. Epub 2021 Apr 21.
PICO Terms
adult (P) adverse reactions; safety (O) all-cause death (O) Johnson & Johnson vaccine; Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies; Ad26.COV2.S; non-replicating viral vector (I/C) moderate disease (O) placebo (I/C) severe, critical, or fatal disease (O) vaccine efficacy (O)
Demographic Information
Geriatric Population
60 years to <70 years 70 years to <80 years 80+ years
Gender
Female Male Non-binary
Race
Alaska Native Asian Black Hispanic Indigenous Indigenous South American Multiracial Native American, American Indian Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander White
Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Ad26.COV2.S vaccine is a recombinant, replication-incompetent human adenovirus type 26 vector encoding full-length severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) spike protein in a prefusion-stabilized conformation.

METHODS: In an international, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial, we randomly assigned adult participants in a 1:1 ratio to receive a single dose of Ad26.COV2.S (5×1010 viral particles) or placebo. The primary end points were vaccine efficacy against moderate to severe-critical coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) with an onset at least 14 days and at least 28 days after administration among participants in the per-protocol population who had tested negative for SARS-CoV-2. Safety was also assessed.

RESULTS: The per-protocol population included 19,630 SARS-CoV-2-negative participants who received Ad26.COV2.S and 19,691 who received placebo. Ad26.COV2.S protected against moderate to severe-critical Covid-19 with onset at least 14 days after administration (116 cases in the vaccine group vs. 348 in the placebo group; efficacy, 66.9%; adjusted 95% confidence interval [CI], 59.0 to 73.4) and at least 28 days after administration (66 vs. 193 cases; efficacy, 66.1%; adjusted 95% CI, 55.0 to 74.8). Vaccine efficacy was higher against severe-critical Covid-19 (76.7% [adjusted 95% CI, 54.6 to 89.1] for onset at =14 days and 85.4% [adjusted 95% CI, 54.2 to 96.9] for onset at =28 days). Despite 86 of 91 cases (94.5%) in South Africa with sequenced virus having the 20H/501Y.V2 variant, vaccine efficacy was 52.0% and 64.0% against moderate to severe-critical Covid-19 with onset at least 14 days and at least 28 days after administration, respectively, and efficacy against severe-critical Covid-19 was 73.1% and 81.7%, respectively. Reactogenicity was higher with Ad26.COV2.S than with placebo but was generally mild to moderate and transient. The incidence of serious adverse events was balanced between the two groups. Three deaths occurred in the vaccine group (none were Covid-19-related), and 16 in the placebo group (5 were Covid-19-related).

CONCLUSIONS: A single dose of Ad26.COV2.S protected against symptomatic Covid-19 and asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection and was effective against severe-critical disease, including hospitalization and death. Safety appeared to be similar to that in other phase 3 trials of Covid-19 vaccines. (Funded by Janssen Research and Development and others; ENSEMBLE ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04505722.).

Ratings
Discipline / Specialty Area Score
Hospital Doctor/Hospitalists
Internal Medicine
Infectious Disease
Public Health
Emergency Medicine
Comments from MORE raters

Emergency Medicine rater

These are sound clinical results for clinical outcomes that matter with low risk of bias. The epidemiologic moment (very high prevalence of Covid-19) and the representativity of the patients brings confidence.

Hospital Doctor/Hospitalists rater

This is a very important article everyone should read.

Public Health rater

Good study with useful findings. It clearly demonstrates the fact that protective efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines are strain/variant specific. Vaccine developers should target at multi-variant vaccines as we evidence rapid COVID-19 mutations.

Public Health rater

This is a very relevant RCT on the so-called "Janssen Covid-19 vaccine". Is a very well conducted study; although, with a short follow-up, due to the urgency for available vaccines. The results on overall efficacy and adverse events are clear, as are the time-frame of efficacy after administration. There was a good population and geographical mix included. The concurrent prevalence of virus mutation during the study was a relevant challenge to the study.