| Literature DB >> 29902133 |
Remon Abu-Elyazeed1, William Jennings2, Randall Severance3, Michael Noss4, Adrian Caplanusi5, Michael Povey5, Ouzama Henry6.
Abstract
The introduction of vaccination programs against measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) led to significant global reduction in morbidity and mortality from these diseases. The currently recommended MMR vaccination schedule in the United States of America comprises 2 vaccine doses typically administered at 12-15 months and 4-6 years, respectively. Considering recent outbreaks in the USA, catch-up vaccination with an additional dose of MMR vaccine could contribute to outbreak control and community protection. This phase III, observer-blind, randomized controlled trial (NCT02058563) assessed the immunogenicity and safety of a dose of the MMR-RIT vaccine (Priorix, GSK) compared to MMR II vaccine (control; M-M-R II, Merck&Co Inc.) in ≥7-year-olds who had received ≥1 previous dose of MMR vaccine. We assessed anti-measles, anti-mumps, and anti-rubella antibody geometric mean concentrations (GMCs; primary endpoint) and seroresponse rates (SRRs) at day 42 post-vaccination. Solicited, unsolicited, and serious adverse events (AEs) were recorded. The according-to-protocol cohort for immunogenicity included 869 participants (MMR-RIT: N = 433; MMR II: N = 436). We observed anti-measles, anti-mumps, and anti-rubella antibody GMCs of 1790.2 mIU/mL, 113.5 EU/mL, and 76.1 IU/mL, respectively, and SRRs of 98.8%, 98.4%, and 99.5%, respectively, after a dose of MMR-RIT; non-inferiority compared to MMR II was demonstrated. Both vaccines showed comparable reactogenicity profiles; the most common solicited AEs were injection site redness and pain, and fever (MMR-RIT: 12.2%, 11.8%, and 3.0%; MMR II: 11.7%, 11.5%, and 5.2%, respectively). The dose of MMR-RIT induced robust immune responses that were not inferior to those of MMR II, and was well tolerated.Entities:
Keywords: immunization schedule; immunogenicity; measles-mumps-rubella vaccine; safety; second dose
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29902133 PMCID: PMC6314414 DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2018.1489186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Vaccin Immunother ISSN: 2164-5515 Impact factor: 3.452
Figure 1.Focus on the Patient section.
Figure 2.Flow diagram of the study participants. Footnote: N, number of participants; n, number of participants within the category; GCP, good clinical practice; TVC, total vaccinated cohort; ATP, according-to-protocol.
Demographic characteristics of the study participants (total vaccinated cohort, N = 911).
| Characteristic | MMR-RIT (N = 454) | MMR II (N = 457) |
|---|---|---|
| Age(years), mean (SD) | 25.9 (13.9) | 25.6 (13.8) |
| Age category, n (%) | ||
| <18 years | 162 (35.7) | 165 (36.1) |
| ≥18 years | 292 (64.3) | 292 (63.9) |
| Females:males | 250:204 | 252:205 |
| Geographic ancestry, n (%) | ||
| White—Caucasian/European heritage | 334 (73.6) | 344 (75.3) |
| African heritage/African American | 108 (23.8) | 103 (22.5) |
| Other | 12 (2.6) | 10 (2.2) |
N, number of participants; SD, standard deviation; n (%), number (percentage) of participants in the category.
Age at study vaccination.
Non-inferiority of MMR-RIT vaccine compared to MMR II in terms of anti-measles, anti-mumps and anti-rubella adjusted geometric mean antibody concentrations at Day 42 (ATP cohort for immunogenicity).
| Adjusted GMC | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Antibody | MMR-RIT (N = 432) | MMR II (N = 435) | Adjusted GMC ratio (MMR-RIT GMC/MMR II GMC) Ratio (95% CI) |
| Anti-measles (mIU/mL) | 1790.2 | 1781.5 | 1.00 ( |
| Anti-mumps (EU/mL) | 113.5 | 107.8 | 1.05 ( |
| Anti-rubella (IU/mL) | 76.1 | 74.6 | 1.02 ( |
ATP, according-to-protocol; GMC, geometric mean concentration; N, number of participants with both pre- and post-vaccination results available; CI, confidence interval.
The two-sided 95% CI for the adjusted GMC ratio was obtained using an ANCOVA model on the logarithm-transformed concentrations including the vaccine group as fixed effect, gender, age and country groups as continuous effects, and the pre-vaccination log-transformed concentration as regressor.
Bolded values indicate lower limit of the two-sided 95% confidence interval ≥0.67 (i.e., criterion for non-inferiority of MMR-RIT over MMR II in terms of GMCs).
Non-inferiority of MMR-RIT vaccine compared to MMR II in terms of anti-measles, anti-mumps and anti-rubella seroresponse rates at Day 42 (ATP cohort for immunogenicity).
| SRR (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Antibody (prespecified threshold) | MMR-RIT (N = 433) | MMR II (N = 436) | Difference in SRRs (MMR-RIT SRR – MMR II SRR) % (95% CI) |
| Anti-measles (≥200 mIU/mL) | 98.8 | 99.1 | -0.24 ( |
| Anti-mumps (≥10 EU/mL) | 98.4 | 99.5 | -1.16 ( |
| Anti-rubella (≥10 IU/mL) | 99.5 | 99.8 | -0.23 ( |
ATP, according-to-protocol; SRR, seroresponse rate: percentage of participants with concentration equal to or above the prespecified threshold indicated for each assay; N, number of participants with available results; CI, confidence interval.
The standardized asymptotic 95% confidence interval was obtained using the Miettinen and Nurminen method.
Bolded values indicate lower limit of the standardized asymptotic 95% confidence interval ≥-5% (i.e., criterion for non-inferiority of MMR-RIT over MMR II in terms of SRRs).
Figure 3.Percentage of participants who achieved a 4-fold or greater increase in anti-measles, anti-mumps, or anti-rubella virus antibody concentrations at Day 42 (ATP cohort for immunogenicity). Footnote: N, number of participants with both pre- and post-vaccination available results; ATP, according-to-protocol.
For participants with a seronegative status at pre-vaccination, a 4-fold rise in antibody concentration is defined as 4 times the cut-off level of the assay. Cut-off levels for anti-measles, anti-mumps and anti-rubella virus antibody concentrations are 150 mIU/mL, 5 EU/mL and 4 IU/mL, respectively. The error bars represent the upper and lower limits of the two-sided 95% confidence intervals obtained using the Clopper Pearson method.
Figure 4.Incidence of solicited injection site (Day 0–3) and general adverse events (Day 0–42) (total vaccinated cohort). Footnote: N, number of participants with the documented dose with local symptoms sheets completed *Except for pain, redness, and swelling, for which MMR-RIT (N = 433). Fever: temperature ≥38°C. Grade 3 was defined as: limb was painful at rest, which prevented normal everyday activities (pain); diameter >50 mm (redness and swelling); temperature >39.5°C (fever); adverse event preventing normal, everyday activities (joint pain, rash/exanthem, meningism/seizure); swelling with accompanying general symptoms (parotid/salivary gland swelling). The error bars represent the upper and lower limits of the two-sided 95% confidence intervals obtained using the Clopper Pearson method.
Percentage of participants with unsolicited adverse events (Day 0–42) and serious adverse events (Day 0–180) (total vaccinated cohort).
| MMR-RIT (N = 454) | MMR II (N = 457) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | % (95% CI) | n | % (95% CI) | |
| Unsolicited AEs (≥1 AE) | 95 | 20.9 (17.3, 25.0) | 82 | 17.9 (14.5, 21.8) |
| Grade 3 (≥1 AE) | 7 | 1.5 (0.6, 3.2) | 5 | 1.1 (0.4, 2.5) |
| Related (≥1 AE) | 12 | 2.6 (1.4, 4.6) | 15 | 3.3 (1.8, 5.4) |
| SAEs (any, ≥1 SAE) | 3 | 0.7 (0.1, 1.9) | 7 | 1.5 (0.6, 3.1) |
AE, adverse event; SAE, serious adverse event; N, number of participants with the administered dose; n/%, number/percentage of participants reporting a symptom at least once; CI, two-sided 95% confidence interval obtained using the Clopper Pearson method.
AEs of grade 3 intensity were those preventing normal, everyday activities.
Related AEs were considered by the investigator to be related or possibly related to the study vaccine.
Figure 5.Study design. Footnote: AEs, adverse events; SAEs, serious adverse events.