| Literature DB >> 27775046 |
Anita S Iyer1, Malika Bouhenia2, John Rumunu3, Abdinasir Abubakar2, Randon J Gruninger1, Jane Pita2, Richard Lako Lino3, Lul L Deng3, Joseph F Wamala2, Edward T Ryan4, Stephen Martin5, Dominique Legros5, Justin Lessler6, David A Sack7, Francisco J Luquero7,8, Daniel T Leung1,9, Andrew S Azman6.
Abstract
Despite recent large-scale cholera outbreaks, little is known about the immunogenicity of oral cholera vaccines (OCV) in African populations, particularly among those at highest cholera risk. During a 2015 preemptive OCV campaign among internally displaced persons in South Sudan, a year after a large cholera outbreak, we enrolled 37 young children (1-5 years old), 67 older children (6-17 years old) and 101 adults (≥18 years old), who received two doses of OCV (Shanchol) spaced approximately 3 weeks apart. Cholera-specific antibody responses were determined at days 0, 21 and 35 post-immunization. High baseline vibriocidal titers (>80) were observed in 21% of the participants, suggesting recent cholera exposure or vaccination. Among those with titers ≤80, 90% young children, 73% older children and 72% adults seroconverted (≥4 fold titer rise) after the 1st OCV dose; with no additional seroconversion after the 2nd dose. Post-vaccination immunological endpoints did not differ across age groups. Our results indicate Shanchol was immunogenic in this vulnerable population and that a single dose alone may be sufficient to achieve similar short-term immunological responses to the currently licensed two-dose regimen. While we found no evidence of differential response by age, further immunologic and epidemiologic studies are needed.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27775046 PMCID: PMC5075787 DOI: 10.1038/srep35742
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Enrollment and follow up of study participants (n = 205).
Note that some participants did not provide blood at visit two but received the vaccine and then provided blood only at visits 1 and 3.
Demographics of study participants.
| Group | Younger Children (1–5) | Older Children (6–17) | Adults > 18 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline Vibriocidal Titer | ≤80 | >80 | ≤80 | >80 | ≤80 | >80 |
| Number | 33 | 4 | 49 | 18 | 80 | 21 |
| Mean age (S.D.) | 3.7 (1.4) | 2.8 (0.6) | 12.8 (3.4) | 10.7 (3.4) | 29.5 (9.1) | 26.7 (8.4) |
| Male | 16/33 (48%) | 1/4 (25%) | 24/49 (49%) | 6/18 (33%) | 25/80 (31%) | 2/21 (10%) |
| Reported at least 1-day with diarrhea in the week before dose 1 of OCV | 10/33 (30%) | 0/4 (0%) | 5/49 (10%) | 5/18 (28%) | 8/80 (10%) | 1/21 (5%) |
| Self reported cholera history before dose 1 of OCV | 1/33 (3%) | 0/4 (0%) | 1/49 (2.0%) | 0/18 (0%) | 3/80 (4%) | 2/21 (10%) |
| Self reported receipt of OCV in 2014 | 11/33 (33%) | 1/3 (33%) | 25/49 (51%) | 13/18 (72%) | 33/80 (41%) | 6/21 (29%) |
| Doses in 2014 (1/2/3) | 7/4/0 | 0/1/0 | 14/10/1 | 7/6/0 | 11/20/2 | 3/3/0 |
Figure 2Baseline Inaba and Ogawa vibriocidal titers (y-axis, log2 transformed) by age (x-axis).
Dots represent individual data points, with blue line representing smoothed (lowess) model with 95% confidence intervals in grey.
Figure 3Vibriocidal titer by study visit (color), age-group (columns) and serotype (rows).
Geometric mean titer (GMT) shown with black horizontal line in each. Asterisks represent p-values from tests comparing the GMT from baseline (T0) to either T1 or T2, two asterisks (**) represents p ≤ 0.01 and three asterisks (***) represents p ≤ 0.001.
Figure 4Vibriocidal responses from one and two-doses of OCV by baseline titer (x-axis), age (color) and serotype (rows).
Horizontal dashed orange line represents 4 fold rise threshold; Vertical dashed line marks baseline titer 80.
Vibriocidal seroconversion (number and proportion) after doses 1(T1) and 2(T2) in participants with or without evidence of recent cholera exposure.
| Vibriocidal Seroconversion | Young Children | Older Children | Adults | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline titer ≤ 80 | Baseline titer > 80 | Baseline titer ≤ 80 | Baseline titer > 80 | Baseline titer ≤ 80 | Baseline titer > 80 | |||||||
| Dose 1 | Dose 2 | Dose 1 | Dose 2 | Dose 1 | Dose 2 | Dose 1 | Dose 2 | Dose 1 | Dose 2 | Dose 1 | Dose 2 | |
| Inaba | 9/10 (90%) | 12/13 (92%) | 0/2 (0%) | 0/2 (0%) | 8/11 (73%) | 12/22 (56%) | 0/4 (0%) | 0/10 (0%) | 26/36 (72%) | 28/39 (72%) | 2/10 (20%) | 3/15 (20%) |
| Ogawa | 8/10 (80%) | 10/12 (83%) | 1/1 (100%) | 1/2 (50%) | 8/13 (62%) | 18/25 (72%) | 0/2 (0%) | 0/8 (0%) | 19/28 (68%) | 26/37 (70%) | 1/18 (5%) | 2/17 (12%) |
OSP-specific IgG, IgM and IgA responses after dose 1(T1) and 2(T2). Asterisks indicate significant increases in post-vaccination levels compared to baseline.
| Parameters | Young Children Geometric Mean (95% C.I.) | Older Children Geometric Mean (95% C.I.) | Adults Geometric Mean (95% C.I.) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Dose 1 | Dose 2 | Baseline | Dose 1 | Dose 2 | Baseline | Dose 1 | Dose 2 | |
| Inaba | 44 (37–54) | 78 (30–206) | 134 (61–294)** | 41 (36–46) | 54 (38–77) | 87 (62–120)**** | 41 (36–47) | 54 (39–75) | 68 (51–92)** |
| Ogawa | 25 (20–31) | 46 (20–108) | 42 (21–85) | 26 (23–30) | 43 (29–65)* | 44 (33–59)** | 30 (26–34) | 56 (40–77)** | 51 (38–69)** |
| Inaba | 60 (50–73) | 80 (46–140) | 78 (53–115) | 84 (73–96) | 74 (55–100) | 92 (78–108) | 58 (51–65) | 81 (65–100)** | 82 (68–100)*** |
| Ogawa | 42 (35–49) | 55 (33–94) | 55 (42–71)* | 61 (53–69) | 55 (41–72) | 70 (57–85) | 44 (38–52) | 65 (52–82) ** | 52 (43–62) |
| Inaba | 23 (19–29) | 34 (20–59) | 38 (24–62) | 28 (24–34) | 38 (24–62) | 37 (27–50) | 34 (29–40) | 63 (48–82)*** | 63 (48–82)*** |
| Ogawa | 9 (7–12) | 12 (7–22) | 12 (7–21) | 14 (12–16) | 19 (12–30) | 14 (12–18) | 17 (14–20) | 24 (18–31) | 23 (17–30) |
*p ≤ 0.05, **p ≤ 0.01, ***p ≤ 0.001, ****p ≤ 0.0001.