French healthcare company Sanofi S.A. (Euronext Paris:SAN) (Nasdaq:SNY) on Monday announced new results from the FLUNITY-HD study, published in The Lancet, confirming that its high-dose influenza vaccine, Efluelda (Fluzone High-Dose in North America), offers significantly greater protection against hospitalisations in adults aged 65 and older compared to standard-dose vaccines.
The large-scale, individually randomised study included 466,320 participants across Denmark and Spain, making it the largest influenza vaccine effectiveness trial conducted in older adults. Efluelda demonstrated a 31.9% additional reduction in laboratory-confirmed influenza hospitalisations and 8.8% greater protection against pneumonia or influenza-related hospitalisations versus standard-dose vaccines.
Additional findings showed a 6.3% reduction in cardio-respiratory hospitalisations and 2.2% fewer all-cause hospitalisations, equating to one fewer hospitalisation for every 515 older adults vaccinated with Efluelda instead of standard-dose formulations.
Noting that older adults account for up to 70% of flu hospitalisations, Sanofi's global head of Medical for Vaccines, Dr. Bogdana Coudsy, said that the company's high-dose vaccine could reduce healthcare costs, ease system pressures, and support independence among seniors.
These results build on 15 years of clinical evidence covering more than 45 million older adults.
Sanofi reports data showing high-dose flu vaccine delivers superior protection for older adults
Avacta reports promising Phase 1a data for faridoxorubicin at ESMO 2025
Jacobio Pharma partners with Oceanpine Capital to focus on core oncology pipeline
Johnson & Johnson to separate its Orthopaedics business as standalone DePuy Synthes
Ascletis selects once-monthly SQ GLP-1R/GIPR dual peptide agonist, ASC35, for clinical development
Autonomix Medical secures new US patent to expand precision nerve-targeted therapies
Merck completes acquisition of Verona Pharma to expand cardio-pulmonary portfolio
Amgen offers Repatha through AmgenNow direct-to-patient programme