Nirsevimab outperforms maternal vaccine in direct comparison studies

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Nirsevimab outperforms maternal vaccine in direct comparison studies

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) remains a leading cause of hospitalisation and severe lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) in infants worldwide. [Lancet 2022;399:2047-2064; Lancet 2017;390:946-958] In recent years, two immunoprophylactic strategies have become available to protect infants, namely maternal immunisation with the RSV prefusion F (RSVpreF) vaccine and passive immunisation of infants with the long-acting monoclonal antibody nirsevimab.

Until recently, real-world comparative evidence between these approaches was limited. However, several new population-based studies now provide important clarity, alongside emerging evidence indicating higher effectiveness and durability of nirsevimab protection against RSV-associated LRTI. Two independent evaluations from France and the US directly compared the effectiveness of nirsevimab and maternal RSVpreF vaccination against RSV-related hospitalisation and severe outcomes. A third follow-up study from Spain examines the population-level benefits associated with nirsevimab beyond the first 6 months after administration. [JAMA 2025:e2524082; JAMA Pediatr 2025:e255778; Lancet Infect Dis 2026:S1473-3099(25)00742-X]

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Nirsevimab outperforms maternal vaccine in direct comparison studies

Nirsevimab outperforms maternal vaccine in direct comparison studies

Nirsevimab outperforms maternal vaccine in direct comparison studies

Nirsevimab outperforms maternal vaccine in direct comparison studies