RESUMO
BACKGROUND: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) indicate that bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccination provides broad beneficial "nonspecific" protection against infections. We investigated the effect on in-hospital mortality of providing BCG immediately upon admission to a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), rather than BCG-at-discharge. The pretrial NICU mortality was 13% and we hypothesized that BCG would reduce mortality by 40%. METHODS: Parallel-group, open-label RCT was initiated in 2013 in Guinea-Bissau. Neonatal intensive care unit-admitted neonates were randomized 1:1 to BCGâ +â oral polio vaccine (OPV) immediately (intervention) versus BCGâ +â OPV at hospital discharge (control; usual practice). The trial was discontinued due to decreasing in-hospital mortality and major NICU restructuring. We assessed overall and disease-specific mortality by randomization allocation in cox proportional hazards models providing mortality rate ratios (MRRs). RESULTS: We recruited 3353 neonates, and the overall mortality was 3.1% (52 of 1676) for BCG-vaccinated neonates versus 3.3% (55 of 1677) for controls (MRRâ =â 0.94; 0.64-1.36). For noninfectious causes of death, the MRR was 1.20 (0.70-2.07), and there tended to be fewer deaths from infections in the BCG group (Nâ =â 14) than among controls (Nâ =â 21) (MRRâ =â 0.65; 0.33-1.28). CONCLUSIONS: Providing BCGâ +â OPV to frail neonates was safe and might protect against fatal infection in the immediate newborn period. Deaths due to prematurity and perinatal complications were unaffected by BCG.