| Literature DB >> 23857274 |
Johan Holst1, Philipp Oster, Richard Arnold, Michael V Tatley, Lisbeth M Næss, Ingeborg S Aaberge, Yvonne Galloway, Anne McNicholas, Jane O'Hallahan, Einar Rosenqvist, Steven Black.
Abstract
The utility of wild-type outer membrane vesicle (wtOMV) vaccines against serogroup B (MenB) meningococcal disease has been explored since the 1970s. Public health interventions in Cuba, Norway and New Zealand have demonstrated that these protein-based vaccines can prevent MenB disease. Data from large clinical studies and retrospective statistical analyses in New Zealand give effectiveness estimates of at least 70%. A consistent pattern of moderately reactogenic and safe vaccines has been seen with the use of approximately 60 million doses of three different wtOMV vaccine formulations. The key limitation of conventional wtOMV vaccines is their lack of broad protective activity against the large diversity of MenB strains circulating globally. The public health intervention in New Zealand (between 2004-2008) when MeNZB was used to control a clonal MenB epidemic, provided a number of new insights regarding international and public-private collaboration, vaccine safety surveillance, vaccine effectiveness estimates and communication to the public. The experience with wtOMV vaccines also provide important information for the next generation of MenB vaccines designed to give more comprehensive protection against multiple strains.Entities:
Keywords: Neisseria meningitidis; New Zealand MenB outbreak; OMV vaccines; controlling MenB epidemics; meningococcal disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23857274 PMCID: PMC3901813 DOI: 10.4161/hv.24129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Vaccin Immunother ISSN: 2164-5515 Impact factor: 3.452

Figure 1. Meningococcal disease prevention; from identification to vaccination, a brief schematic presentation of the history (adopted from a slide originally prepared by Julio Vazquez (presented at IPNC 2012, Wurzburg, Germany). References to the various events may be found in “Introduction”).

Figure 2. Main Protein Composition* of wtOMVs from MenBvac (NO) and MeNZB (NZ), visualized by CBB staining after SDS-PAGE. *The location in the gel of well0known and characterized components is indicated by their respective acronyms to the right in the figure. Omp85, out membrane protein 85; FetA, ferric enterobactin transporter (protein) A (formerly FrpB); PorA, porin protein A (formerly class 1); PorB3, porin protein B3 (formerly class 3); FbpA, ferric binding protein A; RmpA, reduction modifiable protein M (formerly class 4); OpcA, opacity protein cA (formerly class 5); NspA, Neisserial surface protein A.
Table 1. Composition of MeNZB from strain NZ 98/254*
| Component | Function | Quantity per mL | Quantity per dose | Reference/standard |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Active ingredient | 50 μg*** | 25 μg*** | Internal | |
| Adjuvant | 3.3 mg | 1.65 mg | Licensed as a part of a solvent in UK (Chiron SpA, PL 13767/0014) | |
| Tonicity modifying agent | 9 mg | 4.5 mg | Ph. Eur. | |
| pH buffering agent | 5 mM | 5 mM | Ph. Eur. | |
| Diluent | to 1 mL | to 0.5 mL | Ph. Eur. |
*B:4:P1.7–2,4 (B:4:P1.7h,4 according to previous classification); **The OMV antigen drug substance contains wtOMV protein, lipopolysaccharide (0.05–0.15 µg/µg protein) deoxycholate (0.1–0.4 µg/µg protein) in 3% sucrose solution. The final sucrose concentration in the formulated drug product is approximately 0.1–0.3%. ***Quantity expressed as total protein amount; PorA content approx. between 13–25% of total protein (see Fig. 2).

Figure 3. Schematic presentation of vaccine development and immunizationprogram for the public health intervention in New Zealand (the immunization program began in July 2004 and ended in June, 2008. The infant vaccines were given at 6 weeks and at 3, 5 and 10 mo. In January 2006, a 4th infant dose was initiated).
Table 2. Primary immunogenicity assessments in clinical studies using the serum bactericidal activity test with human complement (hSBA) of MeNZB
| Age group | Enrollment | Percent of vaccinees | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| | 250 | 76 (70, 81) | Wong et al., |
| 239 | 76 (70, 81) | Oster et al., | |
| | 51 | 82 (68, 91) | Wong et al., |
| | 201 | 74 (67, 80) | Oster et al., Vaccine 2005 [ |
| 211 | 92 (87, 95) | Oster et al., Vaccine 2007 [ | |
| 312 | 74 (68, 80) | Jackson et al., | |
| | 231 | 75 (69, 80) | Oster et al., |
| 248 | 92 (87, 95) | Oster er al, | |
| 332 | 62 (56, 67) | Wong et al., | |
| | 485 | 76 (72, 80) | Oster et al., |
| | 24 | 96 (79, 100) | Oster et al., |
| | 75 | 100 (25µg dose) | Thornton et al., |
Table 3. Publications describing effectiveness and safety outcomes of the MeNZB vaccine
| Citation* (author/year) | Design and aims | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|
| Arnold et al., | Effectiveness estimates of MeNZB in children up to 19 y of age using GEE model and NIR data through 2008. Examined waning of the immune response after 12 mo and cross-protection against other meningococci. | Effectiveness of 77–79% for ages 6 mo–19 y during 2002–2008. |
| Galloway et al., | Cohort analysis from NIR data for children aged 6 mo to < 5 y followed for 24 mo after vaccination with MeNZB. | Effectiveness was 80–85% compared with unvaccinated children in the 24 mo after eligibility for vaccination. |
| Kelly et al., | Post licensure effectiveness of MeNZB was estimated using a GEE model and data from the NIR for children aged 6 weeks to 19 y. | Disease rates were 3.7 times higher in the unvaccinated group yielding a vaccine effectiveness of 73%. |
| O’Hallahan et al., | Outcomes of the MeNZB vaccination program in New Zealand: vaccine coverage, effectiveness, safety risk management. | MenB disease decreased after MeNZB introduction. |
| McNicolas et al., | Describes intensive safety monitoring activities. | Vaccine was associated with fever outcomes in infants and injection-site pain in adolescents. These events were generally transient and self-limiting. |
*For a more complete list of publications; see the chapters “Safety Monitoring in New Zealand” and “MeNZB Program Effectiveness” in the text. **GEE, generalized estimating equation; NIR, National Immunisation Register

Figure 4. Rates by year of meningococcal B disease in New Zealand (ages 0–19). Diagram based on data given in Table 4.
Table 4. Distribution of cases in New Zealand from 2001–2008 and estimations of cases prevented by MeNZB (all rates are per 100,000)*
| Year | Actual | Actual | Predicted | Predicted | Cases | Proportion | Prevented |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cases | Rate | Cases | Rate | Prevented | Prevented | Est. Total** | |
| 2001 | 285 | 24.7 | 285 | 24.7 | 0 | 0.00% | 0 |
| 2002 | 211 | 18.1 | 211 | 18.1 | 0 | 0.00% | 0 |
| 2003 | 187 | 15.8 | 187 | 15.8 | 0 | 0.00% | 0 |
| 2004 | 144 | 12.1 | 146 | 12.3 | 2 | 1.30% | 2.6 |
| 2005 | 80 | 6.7 | 120 | 10.1 | 39.8 | 33.20% | 47.9 |
| 2006 | 47 | 3.9 | 98 | 8.2 | 51.2 | 52.10% | 61.1 |
| 2007 | 37 | 3.1 | 80 | 6.7 | 43.4 | 54.00% | 50.8 |
| 2008 | 31 | 2.6 | 69 | 5.7 | 37.7 | 54.90% | 45.5 |
*Actual numbers of cases (age 0–19) and rates by year, along with predictions of numbers of cases with no vaccination program, and numbers and proportions of predicted cases that were prevented. 'Cases Prevented' is based on the number of confirmed cases seen. **'Est. Total Prevented' is the number including cases of unknown sero-subtype.

Figure 5. Cumulative number of meningococcal disease cases in the Northern Region of New Zealand from 2002 to 2010 (right; note the Significant Drop between 2004 and 2005). The left part of the figure gives a representation of the Epidemiological data from before the vaccination started (year incidence in 2002 for various regions).