Literature DB >> 31632103

Meningococcal Group B Vaccine For The Prevention Of Invasive Meningococcal Disease Caused By Neisseria meningitidis Serogroup B.

Irene Rivero-Calle1,2, Peter Francis Raguindin2, Jose Gómez-Rial2, Carmen Rodriguez-Tenreiro2, Federico Martinón-Torres1,2.   

Abstract

Invasive meningococcal disease (IMD) is a major public health concern because of its high case fatality, long-term morbidity, and potential to course with outbreaks. IMD caused by Nesseira meningitidis serogroup B has been predominant in different regions of the world like Europe and only recently broadly protective vaccines against B serogroup have become available. Two protein-based vaccines, namely 4CMenB (Bexsero®) and rLP2086 (Trumenba®) are currently licensed for use in different countries against MenB disease. These vaccines came from a novel technology on vaccine design (or antigen selection) using highly specific antigen targets identified through whole-genome sequence analysis. Moreover, it has the potential to confer protection against non-B meningococcus and against other Neisserial species such as gonococcus. Real-world data on the vaccine-use are rapidly accumulating from the UK and other countries which used the vaccine for control of outbreak or as part of routine immunization program, reiterating its safety and efficacy. Additional data on real-life effectiveness, long-term immunity, and eventual herd effects, including estimates on vaccine impact for cost-effectiveness assessment are further needed. Given the predominance of MenB in Europe and other parts of the world, these new vaccines are crucial for the prevention and public health control of the disease, and should be considered.
© 2019 Rivero-Calle et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  epidemiology; invasive meningococcal disease; meningococcal B; meningococcal disease; vaccine development; vaccine effectiveness

Year:  2019        PMID: 31632103      PMCID: PMC6793463          DOI: 10.2147/IDR.S159952

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infect Drug Resist        ISSN: 1178-6973            Impact factor:   4.003


Introduction

Etiology

Neisseria meningitidis (meningococcus) is a gram-negative encapsulated bacteria which causes invasive meningococcal disease (IMD). The most frequent clinical presentations are meningitis and septicemia, both of which are responsible for significant morbidity and mortality worldwide.1–3 Humans are the only host for the bacteria. Meningococcus is also a common commensal in the nasopharynx, transmitted from person-to-person via respiratory secretions.1 Nasopharyngeal carriage prevalence varies with age, having its peak (23.7%) in adolescents and young adults. It may also be substantially higher (up to 71%) in closed communities like college residences and military camps.4–6 The most common pathogenic groups in humans are A, B, C, W, X, and Y, which can cause endemic disease or seasonal outbreaks.1

Epidemiology And Burden Of Illness

Invasive meningococcal disease remains a public health concern worldwide even with safe and effective available vaccines for use.3,7 More than one million cases are reported annually.3,7 Case fatality rates range from 10% to 40% depending mainly on the clinical presentation and serogroup, despite antibiotic-use and intensive supportive care.7 Furthermore, survivors may suffer debilitating sequelae that reduce the quality of life for the patient and family members.7 Financial burden caused by long-term morbidities has continuously been underestimated. This is commonly due to healthcare costs related to permanent cognitive deficits, psychological stress, and adaptive measures for reintegration into society.7,8 The holistic analysis of burden, including both its financial and social aspects, sums up the real consequences of this debilitating disease. The incidence of IMD varies with age. The first peak occurs during the first year of life due to immunological immaturity, a second peak appears in adolescence related to an increased carriage, and a third peak in the elderly that is related to multiple comorbidities.1 In 2017, the average incidence of IMD across Europe slightly decreased to 0.6 cases per 100,000 population from the 0.7 cases per 100,000 population reported in 2010.3,9 Countries with the highest number of incidence in 2015 were Lithuania (2.4 cases/100,000), Ireland (1.5), the Netherlands (1.2), and the United Kingdom (1.2).3 Despite the low overall disease incidence, certain serogroups are emerging as a concern in selected areas.3 The introduction of serogroup C meningococcus10-containing vaccine in the routine immunization across Europe has resulted in a significant decline in the proportion of MenC-disease in the region. However, this has minimal to no effect on other serogroups. N. meningitidis serogroup B (MenB) has become the leading cause of meningococcal disease across several regions, including Europe and America.1,11,12 Although the overall incidence is low compared to other vaccine-preventable diseases, MenB disease carries substantial case fatality rate at 3% to 10%.12 It also results in significant morbidity and carries a threat for an outbreak.13–16 Thus, vaccination against MenB serogroup has become an important public health priority.

Treatment And Preventive Strategies

Meningococcal disease can be devastating as it is capable of causing death in a few hours. Antibiotics should be started as soon as the disease is suspected as their use aims to reduce the severity and chances of death14 However, the best way to avoid adverse long-term sequelae is to prevent infection that could be done through immunization. Currently available meningococcal conjugate vaccines contain polysaccharides from one (A or C), two (C and Y), or four (A, C, W, and Y) serogroups, which are chemically conjugated to protein carrier molecules.17 Although conjugated polysaccharide vaccines seem to work for other serogroups (A, C, Y, W), this has not been the case for serogroup B. A polysaccharide-based vaccine was disregarded for two major reasons, its theoretical risk for autoimmunity and its low immunogenicity. First, there is similarity of human endogenous glycopeptide with serogroup B meningococcal capsule.18,19 Although natural infection is not shown to produce cross-reactive antibodies,20 the use of polysaccharide capsule to induce bactericidal antibodies took lesser priority because of its theoretical risk for auto-antibody responses. Second, the polysialic acid nature of MenB capsule has been shown to be poorly immunogenic.21 Initial investigation on the use of capsular components failed to generate adequate antibody responses.22 Likewise, conjugation of the capsular components failed to show adequate responses on rhesus monkeys.23 As such, other vaccine targets and vaccine designs were ventured.

Vaccines Licensed For Use Against Meningococcus Serogroup B (MenB)

Currently licensed vaccines, 4CMenB (Bexsero®, GSK) and rLP2086 (Trumenba®, Pfizer) (see Table 1), used subcapsular proteins that were widely present not only in serogroup B strains but also across different meningococcus serogroups.4,24–47 These protein candidates used for vaccines are summarized in Table 2.
Table 1

Main Characteristics Of Available MenB Vaccines:27,131 4cmenb And rLP2086

4CMenB VaccinerLP2086 Vaccine
AgeFrom 6 to 8 weeksFrom 10 years
Posology

Infants: 3+1/2+1 (from 3 months)

From 2 to 10 years: 2 doses

From 10 years: 2 doses (Separated 1 month)

Infants: Not authorized for use

From 2 to 10 years: Not authorized

From 10 years: 2 doses (0–6 months) or 3 doses (0–1/2–6 months)

Cross-protectionIn vitro: The genes encoding for the antigens fHbp, NHBA, and NadA can be present and expressed in other serogroups, suggesting a potential impact of MenB vaccines against non-B strainsClinical: Neisseria gonorrheaIn vitro: The genes encoding for fHbp antigen can be present and expressed in other serogroups, suggesting a potential impact of MenB vaccines against non-B strainsClinical: unknown
Number of components/antigens4 different components/antigens

Recombinant fusion protein comprised NHBA (peptide 2) and accessory protein 953 derived from N. meningitidis strains NZ98/254 and 2996, respectively

Recombinant N. meningitidis group B NadA protein (fragment of the full-length protein derived from N. meningitidis strain 2996 (peptide 8 variant 2/3))

Recombinant fusion protein comprised fHbp (variant 1.1) and the accessory protein 936 derived from N. meningitidis strains MC58 and 2996, respectively

Outer membrane vesicle N. meningitidis group B NZ98/254 (B:4:P1.7–2,4) (expressing outer membrane protein PorA serosubtype P1.4)

2 components, variants of 1 single antigen

Recombinant fHBP subfamily A (A05)

Recombinant fHBP subfamily B (B01)

Nasopharyngeal impact± Preliminary dataNo data available
Duration of protectionImmune persistence data7,5 years79Immune persistence data– 4−5 years109
Special groupsComplement deficiencies, asplenia, splenic dysfunction, and those receiving eculizumabNo data available
Effectiveness

UK data (2+1) – after 2 doses: 83% against all strains, 94% against vaccine strains – after Booster: 82% (−81–97%)

Canada data (Quebec) 2 months-20 years– 78% reduction

No data available
Strain coverage predictionMATS assess if strain expressed antigens are recognized by the vaccine induced antibodies (basing on the variant and quantity of expressed antigen),

70% – UK strains

78% – EU strains

91% – US strains

MEASURE assess level of expressed antigen regardless of if the antigen is or not recognized by the vaccine induced antibodies (in 2.150 strains from EU, US, and Canada, 91% of the strains expressed sufficient levels of fHbp susceptible to bactericidal activity by vaccine antibodies)
Bactericidal activitySerum bactericidal antibodies were measured with hSBA assays using 3 strains selected to measure responses to fHbp, NadA, or PorA.Proportion of subjects who achieved a 4-fold or greater increase in hSBA titer for each of the 3 strains was 88% against representative strains in the UK (higher estimation than with MATS)The vaccine was then tested for hSBA against the representative strains of different fHbp type, (PMB3302 (A04), PMB1256 (B03), PMB2001 (A56), PMB2707 (B44), PMB1321 (A22), and PMB2948 (B24).Proportion of subjects who achieved hSBA titers >1:8–16 (depending on the strain) was 80% against different representative strains
Antigenic expression% invasive strains expressing each vaccine antigen at levels that predict bactericidal activity

63.2% – fHbp variant 1

59.3% – NHBA

1.5% – NadA

20.2% – PorA P1.4.

>96% of the MenB strains in Europe express fHbp A o B (2 variants A 30% and B 70%)
Presence of the gene>99% of the invasive strains of Men B contains genes from at least 1 component of 4CMenB>99% of the invasive strains of Men B contains genes from at least 1 component of rLP2806
Table 2

Protein Targets Of Currently Licensed Vaccines

Protein NameClass 1 Outer Membrane ProteinFactor H-binding ProteinNeisseria Adhesin ANeisseria Heparin Binding Antigen
Gene NamePorAfHbpNadANHBA
GNA CodeGNA1870GNA1994GNA2132
Gene-Protein Acc code (PubMed)Q9JPT2C6KHT4A0ELI2A0A024A437
FunctionIon membrane channel. Main antigen in the outer membrane48,51Downregulation of complement cascade by recruitment of factor H24,48,51Bacterial adhesion and penetration into epithelium52,55,132Bacterial adhesionBinds to human heparin (resistance to antibodies)52,132134
Diversity (sub-classifications)High diversity(VR1 and VR2 regions extremely variable)Two main groups (fHbp A and fHbpB)24,48,51Genetically diverse with high antigenic diversity135,136Genetically diverse with high antigenic diversity137
Immunogenicity and Antibody activityHighly immunogenic48Limited cross-reactivity138Immunogenic and has cross-reactivity but with autoantibodies (IgM) to factor H (clinical significance unknown)68,139,140Immunogenic but and antibodies can be crossreactive, though not consistently expressed in many circulating strains135Immunogenic but has contrasting evidence on bactericidal action of the antibody48,134,141
OthersDetermines the serosubtype of Neisseria meningitidesRare meningococcal strains were discovered to have no fHbp expression (Immune pressure selection)137,142Bactericidal activity of antibodies against NadA dependent on antigen expression rather than diversity135,136
rLP2086 antigenNoYes*NoNo
4CMenB antigen143YesYesYesYes

Notes: *RLP2086 final formulation includes two peptide variants, one of each family (A and B).

Main Characteristics Of Available MenB Vaccines:27,131 4cmenb And rLP2086 Infants: 3+1/2+1 (from 3 months) From 2 to 10 years: 2 doses From 10 years: 2 doses (Separated 1 month) Infants: Not authorized for use From 2 to 10 years: Not authorized From 10 years: 2 doses (0–6 months) or 3 doses (0–1/2–6 months) Recombinant fusion protein comprised NHBA (peptide 2) and accessory protein 953 derived from N. meningitidis strains NZ98/254 and 2996, respectively Recombinant N. meningitidis group B NadA protein (fragment of the full-length protein derived from N. meningitidis strain 2996 (peptide 8 variant 2/3)) Recombinant fusion protein comprised fHbp (variant 1.1) and the accessory protein 936 derived from N. meningitidis strains MC58 and 2996, respectively Outer membrane vesicle N. meningitidis group B NZ98/254 (B:4:P1.7–2,4) (expressing outer membrane protein PorA serosubtype P1.4) Recombinant fHBP subfamily A (A05) Recombinant fHBP subfamily B (B01) UK data (2+1) – after 2 doses: 83% against all strains, 94% against vaccine strains – after Booster: 82% (−81–97%) Canada data (Quebec) 2 months-20 years– 78% reduction 70% – UK strains 78% – EU strains 91% – US strains 63.2% – fHbp variant 1 59.3% – NHBA 1.5% – NadA 20.2% – PorA P1.4. Protein Targets Of Currently Licensed Vaccines Notes: *RLP2086 final formulation includes two peptide variants, one of each family (A and B).

Development Of The 4cMenB Vaccine

The 4CMenB vaccine contains subcapsular protein antigens intended to induce the production of bactericidal antibodies against 4 vaccine antigens, namely NHBA, NadA, fHbp, and Porin A (details summarized in Table 2).48 Multiple subcapsular components are thought to enable comprehensive coverage across a number of strains via their respective different mechanisms of action and thus, also prevent eventual “escape” strains.19,25 Suitable subcapsular protein targets were first identified via the process known as “Reverse Vaccinology”. This technology used the complete genome sequence of a pathogenic reference strain of MenB (MC58 strain)49 to identify proteins suitable for further investigation as vaccine candidates.49–52 Of the 2158 genes present in the complete genome of the reference strain,49 the group selected 570 that were predicted in-silico to encode for secreted or surface proteins. Of these, only 350 were successfully expressed as recombinant proteins, of which only 28 were found to induce a functional serum bactericidal antibody (SBA) response.48,53 The selection of proteins to be included was based on its ability to induce bactericidal antibodies, its prevalence across different B strains, and its capacity to confer protection in an infected mouse model.53 The three genome-derived Neisseria antigens (GNA) meeting these criteria were Neisserial heparin binding antigen (NHBA or GNA 2132),52 factor-H binding protein (fHbp or GNA 1870),54 and Neisseria adhesin A (NadA or GNA 1994).55 The three proteins, fHbp, NadA, and NHBA, were observed to have epitopes which elicit protective antibodies.56 Thus, the practice of combining different protein targets in a single vaccine will theoretically result in an enhanced bactericidal response through synergism. A study has shown that some antibodies directed against fHbp and NHBA may work in a cooperative manner for their bactericidal effect.57 A mixture of soluble outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) obtained after detergent extraction was fractionated and purified, and the resulting formulation was used to immunize mice to identify proteins capable of inducing SBA against a range of meningococcal strains.26,58

Development Of The rLP2086 Vaccine

An analysis of 2150 strains has shown that fHBP expression was detected above the limit of detection in >95% of the investigated isolates, proving the ability to induce a protective immune response and thus was considered a reasonable choice for a vaccine antigen.39,58,59 Extensive molecular epidemiology of MenB clinical isolates collected from European meningococcal reference laboratories demonstrated that meningococcal fHBP gene sequences segregate into two subfamilies, designated A and B.60 Protein variants within subfamilies share ≥83% amino acid sequence identity, but only 60–75% identity between subfamilies.61 The rLP2086 vaccine contains two lipidated fHbp variants, one from each subfamily A and B, and aims to broaden cross-protection through a nearly complete coverage of a single antigen.26 The lipidation of fHbp facilitates antigen presentation during MenB infection and acts as an adjuvant.62 The selection of fHbp variants included in rLP2086 vaccine is derived from the phylogenetic analysis of IMD isolates from the US and Europe to cover two of the most prevalent variants from both fHbp subfamilies.59,61,63 The current vaccine formulation contains A05 and B01 variants of the fHbp, with the addition of aluminium salt as an adjuvant.64

Clinical Studies On Meningococcal B Vaccines

Due to the low incidence of invasive meningococcal disease in some countries or the unpredictability of the emergence of an outbreak, study designs with clinical endpoints are almost impossible to conduct.65–67 Thus, a correlate of protection is being used on all meningococcal vaccines in development. The correlate of protection is an immunologic outcome that is used as a surrogate measure for efficacy. For serogroups A, C, W, X, and Y both rabbit (rSBA) and human serum bactericidal assays (hSBA), which measure levels of functional antibody, are an accepted correlate of protection (although baby rabbit serum is recommended); whereas human serum bactericidal assays (hSBA), is the only currently accepted correlate of protection used for the development of MenB vaccines.34,68 However, due to the inherent difference of the two MenB vaccines, each product used a different assay to measure the correlate of protection and thus, direct comparison of efficacy is not feasible. Tables 3 and 4 summarize the available data on efficacy and safety of 4CMenB28–30,69–71 and rLP2086,31–33,72 respectively.
Table 3

Key Clinical Trials On 4cmenb Vaccine

Findlow 201028 (UK)Snape 201073 (UK)Kimura 201169 (Italy And Germany)Gossger 201230 (Belgium, United Kingdom, Czech Republic, Germany, Italy, And Spain)Vesikari 201371 (Finland, Czech Republic, Germany, Austria And Italy)

Study Characteristics

Study DesignPhase IIPhase IIPhase IIPhase II2BPhase III
Study subjects and ageInfants(2 months)Infants(6–8 months)Adults(18–50 years)Infants(2 months)Infants(2 months)
Schedule (3 dose regimen)2, 4, 6, and 12 months of ageDay 0, day 60, and 12 months of ageDay 0, day 60, and 4 months2, 4, and 6 months of age2, 4, 6, and 12 months of age
Sample size (total)147605418853630
(II) Immunogenicity endpoints (strain-specific)*

Proportion of patients with hSBA titers >1:4

44/76-SL

NZ98/254

5/99

M01 240101

M00 242922

M01 240364

M01 24035

87% (34/39)85% (34/40)61% (35/57)47% (18/38)63% (24/38)12% (4/33) – (0/32)100% (24/24)100% (24/24)96% (23/24)100% (22/22)70% (16/23)100% (2/2)90% (18/20)97% (38/39)100% (39/39)92% (36/39)99% (521/525)**79% (417/528)**99% (517/520)**100% (1181/1181)100% (1184/1184)84% (992/1183)
(H) Geometric mean titers

44/76-SL

NZ98/254

5/99

30.0 (19.0–46.0)126.0 (77.0–205.0)19.0 (11.0–33.0)189 (136–263)906 (700–1172)44 (32–62)95 (68–131)269 (205–354)30 (18–50)83 (77–90)12 (10–13)520 (475–570)91 (88–95)634 (606–664)

13–15)

(III) Safety Endpoints
Serious AEs (total)18% (9/50)3% (1/30)– (0/50)10% (63/625)8% (210/2480)
AEs (total)100% (50/50)100% (30/30)100% (50/50)99% (620/625)99% (2469/2480)

Pyrexia

Tenderness

Erythema

Swelling

23% (11/48)75% (36/48)98% (47/48)75% (36/48)10% (6/30)60% (18/30)93% (28/30)67% (20/30)– (0/50)100% (50/50)56% (28/50)-83% (514/624)85% (529/624)86% (535/625)53% (328/625)78% (1945/2480)89% (2200/2480)87% (2166/2480)54% (1342/2480)

Notes: *Immunogenicity taken 1 month after 3rd dose, adverse events taken after 1 month of the 3rd dose; **Titers >1:5; ***No disaggregated data available.

Table 4

Key Clinical Trials On rLP2086 Vaccine

Richmond 201272(Australia, Poland And Spain)Nissen 201331 (Australia)Marshall 201332 (Australia)Vesikari 201633 (Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Poland, Spain, Sweden)

Study characteristics

Study DesignPhase IIPhase IIPhase IIPhase III
Study subjects and ageAdolescents11–18 yearsChildren8–14 yearsAdults18–40 yearsAdolescents11–19 years
Dosing schedule0, 2, and 6 months0, 1, and 6 months0, 1, and 6 months0, 1, and 6 months0, 2, and 6 months
Sample size (total)53812755426414
(II) Immunogenicity endpoints based on strain (variant of fHBP)

Proportion of patients with hSBA titers 1:16

PMB2001 (A56)

PMB80 (A22)

PMB2707 (B44)

PMB2948 (B24)

95% (20/21)76% (16/21)****88% (289/329)62% (207/332)30% (101/333)45% (148/328)98% (332/339)88% (303/344)59% (194/331)64% (214/337)
(E) Geometric mean titers

PMB2001 (A56)

PMB80 (A22)

PMB2707 (B44)

PMB2948 (B24)

******152.955.140.329.1159.656.335.025.6
(III) Safety endpoints
Serious AE5% (1/22)7% (3/45)**3% (12/426)3% (14/414)
AEs8% (18/22)9% (42/45)27% (113/426)28% (115/414)

Pyrexia

Tenderness

7% (3/45)1% (7/426)1% (6/426)<1% (3/414)<1% (4/414)

Notes: *Dosage at 60 ug per antigen, immunogenicity taken at 1 month after 3rd dose, adverse events until 30 days from 3rd dose; **No disaggregated data available.

Key Clinical Trials On 4cmenb Vaccine Study Characteristics Proportion of patients with hSBA titers >1:4 44/76-SL NZ98/254 5/99 M01 240101 M00 242922 M01 240364 M01 24035 44/76-SL NZ98/254 5/99 13–15) Pyrexia Tenderness Erythema Swelling Notes: *Immunogenicity taken 1 month after 3rd dose, adverse events taken after 1 month of the 3rd dose; **Titers >1:5; ***No disaggregated data available. Key Clinical Trials On rLP2086 Vaccine Study characteristics Proportion of patients with hSBA titers 1:16 PMB2001 (A56) PMB80 (A22) PMB2707 (B44) PMB2948 (B24) PMB2001 (A56) PMB80 (A22) PMB2707 (B44) PMB2948 (B24) Pyrexia Tenderness Notes: *Dosage at 60 ug per antigen, immunogenicity taken at 1 month after 3rd dose, adverse events until 30 days from 3rd dose; **No disaggregated data available. Furthermore, the clinical vaccine development program of the two vaccines was planned for introduction in different age groups, with the 4CMenB for individuals from 2 months of age and older and the rLP2086 for adolescents from 10 years of age. However, trials have been ongoing on both vaccines to expand their use among age groups beyond their current marketing approval.

Immunogenicity Of The 4cMenB Vaccine

4CMenB was shown to elicit good immunogenicity in infants using 3 doses. Although initial clinical trials were performed with a total of 4 doses, results from later trials allowed dose reduction.28,30,69,71,73 Furthermore, concomitant administration of MenC CRM-conjugated vaccine (MenC-CRM) and 4CMenB in infants was found to be immunogenic, resulting in a sufficient immune response against MenB after primary and booster vaccination.38 The immunogenicity of 4CMenB in adolescents was studied in four clinical studies as part of the clinical vaccine development program and eventual planned marketing authorization in the similar age group.35–37,74 hSBA was assessed against three indicator strains (strain 44/76-SL for fHbp, strain 5/99 for NadA, and strain NZ98/254 for PorA P1.4) to determine the immunogenicity of individual vaccine components.35,37 A suitable strain for assessing bactericidal activity of NHBA-specific antibodies was not available at that time, and was later performed using strain M10713. The primary immunogenicity endpoints in the four 4CMenB clinical trials were different.35–37,74 The hSBA titers of ⩾1:4 were used in two studies,37,74,75 but to ensure a higher assurance of reaching the immunological endpoint, the subsequent studies have used higher titers as a cut-off (see Table 3). In terms of long-term immunogenicity, the primary course is sufficient to achieve a satisfactory immune response within 30 days of vaccination for both infants and adolescents.29,76 A booster dose at 12 months with 4CMenB improved bactericidal responses and facilitated immune persistence in infants until 28 months of age.29 On the other hand, an additional dose at 40–44 months old in those who had previously completed the primary course showed an anamnestic response.77 However, antibody persistence, booster responses, and safety profiles were similar between vaccination schedules using 2 primary doses and 3 primary doses.78 Among adolescents, hSBA declined at 4.5 years and 7 years after primary immunization although remained to be higher compared to the vaccine-naïve population.76,79

Immunogenicity Of The rLP2086 Vaccine

The clinical trials on rLP2086 are peculiar as they used strains of meningococcus that expressed fHBP variant that is different from what the vaccine contains (A05 and B01). This alternative strategy aims to provide an immunologic proof that the vaccine can induce protective antibodies against a broader range of meningococcal strains. The vaccine was then tested for hSBA against the representative strains of different fHbp type, namely PMB3302 (A04), PMB1256 (B03), PMB2001 (A56), PMB2707 (B44), PMB1321 (A22), and PMB2948 (B24).4,80 A higher threshold value was also set to ensure high titers when the vaccine is used in humans (>1:8–16, depending on the strain).4,81 rLP2086 has shown to elicit robust hSBA responses to MenB strains expressing different fHBP variants on adolescents at 2 or 3 doses.39 Co-administration with adolescent immunizations and rLP2086 was also evaluated in some studies. The non-inferiority criteria were met for all immunogenicity endpoints for MenB strains, MCV4, and Tdap antigens, as well as for HPV antigens, except HPV18.82,83 Seroconversion for all 4 HPV antigens was achieved by ≥99% of subjects in the groups that received quadrivalent HPV vaccine.83 After three doses of rLP2086, protective hSBA titers above the correlate of protection (≥1:4) were elicited after a 4-year follow-up in more than 50% of the children for the three out of four representative meningococcal strains expressing the vaccine-heterologous antigens.84 However, serum titers declined to <1:4 by 9 to 11 months for some strains, raising concerns by some on the strain-specificity of the long-term protection.85

Vaccination In Special Groups

The major bactericidal action of antibodies against meningococcus is mediated by the complement system. Thus, children with complement deficiencies, asplenia, and splenic syndromes, and children receiving drugs against the complement proteins (i.e., eculizumab) are at high-risk for the development of invasive meningococcal diseases.86–89 4CMenB is recommended for children with complement deficiencies, asplenia, splenic dysfunction, and those receiving the monoclonal antibody eculizumab.86 However, data on the safety and immunogenicity in these patients are scarce.87–89 In a clinical study enrolling children with asplenia or splenic dysfunction, giving 2 doses of 4CMenB has been shown to induce bactericidal antibodies as compared to healthy controls.86 Also, the 4CMenB vaccine was able to generate bactericidal activity, albeit lower, in the presence of exogenous complement on the majority of children with complement deficiency86 The significance of the inferior responses of SBA titers in complement-deficient children and those undergoing complement-inhibitor therapy must be further analyzed and compared with ongoing surveillance on vaccine failures. Schedules in this subgroups of children could be revised to accommodate additional dose, the inclusion of a booster, or different dose intervals.86 There is no data available for special groups with rLP2086 vaccine.

Cross-Protection Against Other Meningococcal Serogroups

The genes encoding for the antigens fHbp, NHBA, and NadA can be present and expressed in other serogroups, suggesting a potential impact of MenB vaccines against non B strains.42 Thus, the vaccine has a theoretical effect against all serogroups becoming a true universal anti-meningococcal vaccine. The first investigation was done on the possible cross-protection against serogroup × causing outbreaks in Africa in a pooled sera of infants immunized with 4CMenB.43 Although with small sample size, the sera revealed bactericidal antibodies against the other serogroup. Further studies have explored the potential impact of MenB vaccination against non-B meningococcal disease in Australia, Europe, and Brazil.42,44,90 The results showed that sera of 4CMenB immunized subjects induced complement-mediated killing of MenC, MenW, and MenY in a range from 45% to 90%, suggesting that 4CMenB vaccine could potentially have an impact on non-B meningococcal disease.42–44,90 Immunological responses have been assessed with non-B meningococcal disease-causing strains from Europe, Africa, and the United States using rLP2086.39 After 2 or 3 doses of the vaccine, 53% to 100% of individuals had bactericidal responses against meningococcal serogroup C, W, Y, and X strains, and 20% to 28% had bactericidal responses against serogroup A strains.81 In fact, these bactericidal responses were higher than the serological correlate of protection for meningococcal disease (hSBA titers ≥ 1:8 vs hSBA titers ≥ 1:4).91 These results suggest that rLP2086 could confer protection against meningococcal disease, regardless of serogroup.91

Cross-Protection Against Neisseria gonorrhoeae (gonococcus)

Neisseria gonorrhoeae and N. meningitidis are closely related to bacteria. Although vaccines are routinely used for N. meningitidis, there is currently no vaccine available for N. gonorrhoeae (gonococcus). The target epitopes of the currently licensed vaccines for meningococcus are similarly found in gonococcus. Recent studies have proven that N. gonorrhoeae shares a high level of sequence identity with OMV antigens in serogroup B meningococcal vaccines, MeNZB, and 4CMenB.92–94 Antibodies in the serum of 4CMenB vaccines are able to recognize several gonococcal proteins, including the gonococcal NHBA homologue.94 Theoretically, the high level of anti-gonococcal-NHBA antibodies generated by the MenB vaccines may result in additional cross-protection against gonorrhea. It was estimated that an OMV-based vaccine has an effectiveness estimate of 31% (95% CI 21–39) against gonococcus.92,94

Vaccine Coverage Of Invasive Meningococcal Group B Isolates

To predict the strain coverage of the vaccine across different meningococcal strains, a large panel of bacterial isolates representative of invasive disease would need to be tested for hSBA using a huge number of samples. A large volume of serum is also needed per participant which would pose ethical problems in pediatric studies.95 Furthermore, the SBA assay with human complement is difficult to standardize from varying sources for different meningococcal strains. Thus, estimation of strain coverage of the current vaccines using conventional laboratory methods proves cumbersome and impractical. This leads to the development of alternative assays to measure surface antigens and theoretical strain coverage of the vaccine. However, these novel assays are vaccine-specific as they detect different proteins that are distinct to the vaccine product, thereby limiting its cross-platform utility and comparability. The Meningococcal Antigen Typing System (MATS) assess if strain expressed antigens are recognized by the vaccine-induced antibodies (basing on the variant and quantity of expressed antigen). MATS is an ELISA test designed specifically to measure the immunologic cross-reactivity and quantity of antigen expression of three 4CMenB protein antigens (fHbp, NadA, and NHBA).25,96 The results are correlated with the lysis of the meningococcal strains in the hSBA assays upon exceeding the positive bacterial threshold (PBT) for any one of the 3 antigens of the vaccine with ≥80% chance of being neutralized in a serum of the immunized person. Those strains that are positive for 2 or more antigens are more likely to be neutralized at 96%.25,96 The theoretical strain coverage of the vaccine could be defined as the proportion of circulating strains in a given country or region with scores (RP: relative potency) above the bactericidal threshold (PBT) for at least one of the three antigens. MATS has estimated strain coverage in different countries for 4CMenB vaccine which ranges from 66% in Canada (95% CI, 43–78%) to 91% in the US (95% CI, 72–96%).97,98 In a study conducted using 1052 strains of MenB from 5 European countries (Germany, France, UK, Italy, and Norway), MATS predicted that 4CmenB strain coverage would range from 73% (95% CI, 57–87%) in the UK to 87% (95% CI, 70–93%) in Italy.45 MATS coverage increases with age, varies by geographical region, and is associated with more severe disease.46 Temporal changes in circulating strains underscore the need for continued monitoring of antigen expression and diversity, particularly in countries using 4CMenB vaccines in their respective immunization programmes.46 The Meningococcal Antigen Surface Expression (MEASURE, Pfizer Inc.) assay was developed to assess surface expression levels of fHbp on meningococcal strains and prediction of complement-mediated killing by hSBA in an immunized serum. MEASURE assesses level of expressed antigen regardless of if the antigen is or not recognized by the vaccine-induced antibodies. MEASURE is a flow cytometry platform that uses a monoclonal antibody specific to an epitope common to both fHBP variants, thereby allowing a phenotypic assessment of expression and quantification of surface-expression on meningococcus strains prepared via hSBA assay. Unlike some other meningococcal epidemiologic markers, fHBP surface expression levels determined by the flow cytometric-based MEASURE assay were predictive of strain susceptibility in the hSBA assay.99 In a large, prevalence-based collection of invasive MenB isolates from national reference laboratories in the United States and Europe, 95.8% of them demonstrated fHBP expression levels greater than the limit of detection of the assay.26,60

Safety Of Meningococcal B Vaccines

4cMenB Vaccine

Some commonly observed vaccine-induced reactions have been reported when administering 4CMenB in both adolescents37 and infants.47 The most frequent among adolescents and adults were pain at the injection site37 while injection-site tenderness, erythema, and fever >38.5ºC were more frequently observed in infants (especially when 4CMenB was concomitantly administered with routine immunization).47,100 This reactogenicity can be prevented with the prophylactic use paracetamol provided with the vaccine without interferences in the immunogenicity.47 For this reason, UK Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation advised the use of paracetamol when 4CmenB is administered to infants concomitantly with other routine vaccines.47 Two large observational cohort studies investigated the national MenB immunization programmes for infants (2–4 months) in the UK101 and in individuals (2 months to 20 years) in Quebec.102,103 After the administration of 3 million doses of 4CMenB in the UK, 366 (41%) reports were received related to local reactions and 364 (40%) related to fever.104 To note, 160 reported of a persistent nodule at the site of injection, three (<1%) reported of Kawasaki disease, and another three reported (<1%) of sudden infant death syndrome.104 There were no significant safety concerns.104 On the other hand, among approximately 43,000 vaccinated individuals at Quebec, only two possibly vaccine-related serious adverse events (bronchospasm) were reported. However, the reported prevalence of local pain (97%) and fever (44%) was high.103,105 Healthcare-associated costs of vaccine-related adverse events or increased reactogenicity might be eventually significant. However, its low incidence in real-life practice and the protection the vaccine confers against the disease overwhelmingly outweigh the risks.106 Vaccine reactogenicity could potentially raise concerns in the immunization campaigns, but accumulated experience shows that it has not had a significant impact on the immunization program.107

rLP2086 Vaccine

Safety and immunogenicity of the vaccine were established in several clinical trials (see Table 4).31–33,72 Localized reactogenicity was mainly observed in adolescent trials. Only few systemic reactions, such as fever or headache, were attributed to the vaccine.84,108,109 rLP2086 appears to be well tolerated in younger children. Fever occurred in 0–40.9% of toddlers receiving any rLP2086 vaccine dose, but was mostly mild or moderate in severity.110 By comparison, 9.7–18.8% of participants receiving HAV reported some fever.110 Four cases of fever >40.0°C were reported (3 in the 200 μg group and 1 in the 60 μg group), each of which lasted for 1 to 2 days.110 Post-marketing safety data of rLP2086 through the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) analysis showed very few serious adverse events and no new safety concerns.111 The first real-world experience to examine adverse events of bivalent rLP2086 was at Rhode Island (US) where more than 90% of a college-age population was vaccinated.112 The most commonly reported adverse event was injection site pain, followed by fatigue, myalgia, and fever, similar to those reported in clinical trials, while headache rates were lower than previously reported.112

Potential For Herd Immunity Through The Impact On Carriage

Adolescents have the highest rates of meningococcal carriage and transmission rates.11 Interrupting carriage acquisition of invasive MenB strains in adolescents is crucial in the control of meningococcal disease by reducing the transmission to other age groups through herd immunity.4,24 A strategy focused on adolescents may have more profound and long-lasting indirect impact, and may be more cost-effective. Furthermore, the increasing focus of different countries in improving adolescent health can be used as a platform to include newer vaccines in the routine immunization program targeting this age-group. However, limited data exist on the impact of both MenB vaccines on meningococcal carriage and herd protection.113 A clinical trial evaluated meningococcal carriage among university students in England after MenACWY or 4CMenB vaccination. It revealed reduction in carriage observed after 3 months of the second vaccine dose.36 Another study which evaluated carriage in high school students in the US after MenACWY immunization concluded that carriage rates were lower than expected, with nongroupable strains accounting for almost 90% of isolates.36 In contrast, another study assessed meningococcal carriage after MenB vaccination in response to a university outbreak in 2015.114 Total MenB carriage prevalence among sampled students was stable with eradication of the outbreak strain.114 Neither 1–3 doses of rLP2086 nor 1–2 doses of 4CMenB were associated with decreased total or MenB carriage prevalence and are unlikely to provide herd protection in the context of an outbreak response.114 Three studies evaluated MenB carriage in university students after vaccination with MenB OMV in France115 and in the US using rLP208614 or 4CMenB.36 Only one individual vaccinated with MenB OMV was a carrier (serogroup not determined), whereas 16 children in the unvaccinated group were carriers (5 carried MenB).13,14,36,114–116 Four percent (n=31) of the university students immunized with rLP2086 were carriers of MenB at baseline. Those receiving 4CMenB had lower carriage prevalence, that is, only at 3 months after the second vaccine dose, and applied to capsular groups B, C, W, and Y, rather than solely to group B.14,36,114,115 Current evidence on disease prevention is still inconclusive owing to the small number of cases. To provide more evidence on the effects on meningococcal carriage and prospects on generating herd immunity, a cluster-randomized controlled trial enrolled 24,269 school students ≥14 years of age which used 4CMenB (ACTRN12617000079347 and NCT03089086).117,118 Preliminary results showed that among the enrolled patients with nasopharyngeal carriage, vaccination did not reduce disease causing meningococcus serogroup, including MenB.119 Similarly, no reduction was seen among non-groupable meningococcus carriage.119 As such, the 4CMenB was hypothesized to have no indirect effect. Another meningococcal carriage trial, led by the Oxford Vaccine Group at the University of Oxford, is ongoing using two licensed MenB vaccines on teenagers 16–18 years old (EUDRACT 2017-004609-42).120 One group will receive 4CMenB while another will receive rLP2086. The vaccines will be given at the beginning of the study and after six months. Two throat swabs will be taken 12 months apart. A further control group will receive 4CMenB vaccine 12 months into the study. The trial will be recruiting students in the UK for 18 months which started in April 2018. Both studies will hopefully provide a better understanding of the effects of the vaccines on the nasopharyngeal carriage in adolescents.

Real-World Experience On Vaccination Against Meningococcal B

Both 4CMenB and rLP2086 vaccines have gained marketing approval in several countries. 4CMenB is approved for use in 39 countries including EU/EEA countries, Australia, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Uruguay, and the US, and has been included in the immunization calendar in Austria, Czech Republic, Andorra, Lithuania, UK, Ireland, Italy, Australia, Canada, and the US.26,121 rLP2086 is approved for use in EU/EEA and the US in individuals 10 years of age and older. We summarized in Table 5 the experiences of the US, the UK, Canada, and Spain on the use of the MenB vaccines in a public health setting.
Table 5

Real-World Data Of MenB Vaccination In Different Countries

USUKCanadaSpain
Immunization Program
ProgramCampaignRoutineCampaignRecommended by the Spanish Pediatric Association
AreaSelect colleges and universitiesNationwideOne regionNationwide (private setting)
Eligible population

Adolescents (16–18 years)

Infant (2 months to 18 months)

Infants (2 months to 18 months)

Children and Adolescents (>1 year to 20 years)

Infants, children, and adolescents (2 months to20 years)

VaccinerLP2086 or 4CMenB4CMenB4CMenB4CMen B
Vaccine schedule3 doses (rLP2086)2 doses1443 doses (2 months4 months12 months)4 doses (2 months–4 months–6 months–12 months)2 doses (2 months apart)4 doses (2 months–4 months–6 months–12 to 15 months)
Immunization coverage(a) Dose 1(b) Dose 2

~60%

No data

95.5%

88.6%

83%

77%

(a) -(b) 33.5% (estimated average for at least 2 doses before 2 years of age)
Vaccine Effects and Safety
EffectivenessVE 82·9% (95% CI 24.1 to 95.2)VE 79% (95% CI: −231% to 99%)
ImpactAsymptomatic carriage remained stable across immunization campaign(20–24%)50% incidence rate reduction (from pre-vaccine period)For vaccine target: 96% incidence reduction (from baseline) decline from 11.4 to 0.4 cases/100,000For non-vaccine target, 56% decline 1.1 to 0.5 case/100,000Reduction of 41.7% for 0–5 months and 65.4% for 6–11 months compared to baseline (year before availability of 4CmenB in Spain)
Safety

Local reaction 41%

Fever 40%

Absenteeism 6.2%

Medical consultation 9.2%

Comments

Low coverage from lack of information

Poor immunization program in adolescents

Low incidence of IMD precluding efficacy assessment

Two dose priming is cost-effective

Effectiveness seen within 10 mos of routine implementation

Large-scale population-based safety monitoring reveals acceptable safety profile

Vaccine was given in private market.

Sources

McNamara JID 2017114

Soeters CID 2017116

Fisher J Adol Health 2018145

Bryan Lancet Child Adolesc Health 2018104

Parikh Lancet 2016101

Serres INSPQ105

Serres Vaccine 2018103

De Wals CID 2017102

INSPQ125

RENAVE 2017–2018,126,130

Moreno-Perez, 2015127

Abad 2012146

GTV 2019129

Note: *Impact through a cost-effectiveness assessment modeling.

Real-World Data Of MenB Vaccination In Different Countries Adolescents (16–18 years) Infant (2 months to 18 months) Infants (2 months to 18 months) Children and Adolescents (>1 year to 20 years) Infants, children, and adolescents (2 months to20 years) ~60% No data 95.5% 88.6% 83% 77% Local reaction 41% Fever 40% Absenteeism 6.2% Medical consultation 9.2% Low coverage from lack of information Poor immunization program in adolescents Low incidence of IMD precluding efficacy assessment Two dose priming is cost-effective Effectiveness seen within 10 mos of routine implementation Large-scale population-based safety monitoring reveals acceptable safety profile Vaccine was given in private market. McNamara JID 2017114 Soeters CID 2017116 Fisher J Adol Health 2018145 Bryan Lancet Child Adolesc Health 2018104 Parikh Lancet 2016101 Serres INSPQ105 Serres Vaccine 2018103 De Wals CID 2017102 INSPQ125 RENAVE 2017–2018,126,130 Moreno-Perez, 2015127 Abad 2012146 GTV 2019129 Note: *Impact through a cost-effectiveness assessment modeling.

Experience In A Nationwide Routine Infant Immunization (UK)

4CMenB was first licensed in Europe in 2013122 and was included in the UK’s immunization program as part of the routine infant schedule in September 2015.123 During this immunization program, the vaccine was administered to infants as a reduced 2-dose primary series at 2 and 4 months of age with a booster dose at 12 months, alongside their routine immunizations. The resulting coverage in eligible infants was 95.5% for the first dose and 88.6% for the second dose in the primary series.101 Catch-up vaccination was offered to infants attending their routine immunization at 3 months of age with 2 primary doses at 3 and 4 months (coverage was 88.8% and 75.2%, respectively), or at 4 months of age with a single dose (coverage was 76.6%).101 The vaccine effectiveness of the 2-dose primary series was 82.9% against all Men B cases during the first 10 months of the program. Compared with the pre-vaccine period, there was a 50% reduction of the incidence rate ratio of Men B cases among the vaccine-eligible cohort for 4CMenB vaccine, as against a non-significant 14% reduction in the unvaccinated cohort.101 During the surveillance period from September 1, 2015 until May 31, 2017, approximately 1.29 million children aged between 2 and 18 months received more than 3 million doses of 4CMenB vaccine. Nine hundred two (902) reports of suspected adverse events were collected from the UK Yellow Card Scheme, of which 366 (41%) were related to local reactions and 364 (40%) related to fever.104 There were no safety signals related to pre-specified adverse events of interests as the occurrence of these events was similar to background rates.104 There was no indication of reduced compliance with doses of other routine vaccinations. This study is the most comprehensive assessment of 4CMenB vaccine’s safety to date.

Experience In A Selective (US) And Subnational Immunization

In the US, outbreaks of MenB disease occur at universities and other organizations. However, until October 2014, there were no licensed MenB vaccines available for outbreak control. A MenB disease outbreak occurred in 2013–2014 among persons linked to a university in New Jersey.13 This prompted the US Food and Drug Administration to authorize the use of an investigational MenB vaccine to control the outbreak.124 The attack rate among undergraduate students was 134 cases/100,000 and was more than 1400 times greater than the national incidence in this age group. Since cases occurred among students of four undergraduate class years, the entire undergraduate population was targeted for vaccination. Over 5000 students received the first-dose of 4CMenB during the vaccination campaign, achieving 89.1% coverage with the two-dose vaccination series. No MenB cases were reported in vaccinated population regardless of the number of doses administered. However, the rarity of the case precluded the estimation of vaccine effectiveness. In Canada, to address the high incidence serogroup B, the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region in Quebec conducted a mass vaccination campaign on individuals ≤20 years old from May 2014 to July 2015.124,103 4CMenB vaccine was given targeting 59,098 individuals, achieving 83% coverage for 1 dose. For the vaccine target age group (0–20 years old), the disease incidence declined by 96% from 11.4 to 0.4 cases/100,000. For non-vaccine targets (>21 years), disease incidence declined by 56% from 1.1 to 0.5 cases/100,000.125 Furthermore, vaccine safety surveillance reports demonstrated an acceptable safety and risk-benefit profile in a large-scale, population-based study.103 While the number of sporadic cases of MenB disease occurring in each year in both the US and Canada was highly varied, the potential impact of MenB vaccines on both sporadic disease and outbreaks is an important consideration in the development of recommendations for the use of licensed MenB vaccines.

Experience In A Limited Release Of The Vaccine For Private Market Use In Spain

The official meniningococal B vaccine recommendation in Spain since 2013 is limited for use in high-risk population126 However, the Spanish Pediatric Association recommends universal vaccination of all infants with this vaccine127 As a result, moderate immunization coverages were achieved as vaccines were only made available in the private market without reimbursements from the national government.128 Based on the data by the Spanish Health Ministry on the utilization of 4CMenB in private setting, 33.55% of the infants (2015–2016 birth cohorts) received at least 2 doses of the vaccine129 Older birth cohorts obtained 19.2% (207–2015) and 6.85% (2003–2006) coverage rates. The highest coverage rate was seen in Galicia and Castilla y Leon region with 58.92% and 54.61% in the youngest birth cohort, respectively. Since the vaccine was not included in the routine immunization program, children may have obtained the vaccine with varying schedules. Vaccine supply was also inconsistent across the observation period. To estimate the vaccine impact in Spain, the decrease in the number of cases was roughly compared from pre-vaccination period (2013 to 2014 period) to subsequent post-vaccination period (2015-onwards). A decline in cases was observed at 41.7% for 0–5 months and 65.4% for 6–11 months comparing 2013–2014 season (baseline, prior to immunization) and 2017–2018 season (after limited immunization in private market).129,130 There are ongoing efforts to assess effectiveness of the 4CMenB vaccine in Spain using a case–control design.

Conclusion

The global burden of invasive meningococcal disease remains substantial, lingering, and unpredictable. Considering that most cases occur in otherwise healthy subjects, the most effective strategy in the fight against meningococcal disease is prevention through immunization. The immunogenicity, effectiveness, and safety profiles of 4CMenB and rLP2086 have been demonstrated in clinical trials and population-based surveillance studies. Available data indicate that new MenB vaccines have the potential to have a huge impact on the global burden of meningococcal disease. Real-world evidence, although limited, is rapidly accumulating and is encouraging. Post-licensure safety data are reassuring for both vaccines. The preliminary effectiveness assessment for 4CMenB in the UK, Canda, or Spain, looks positively promising. Likewise, as with any new vaccine, we still have knowledge gaps on the ideal age groups to be immunized, the long-term duration of clinical efficacy, or the impact on the nasopharyngeal carriage and eventual herd effect. Universal vaccination programs such as those undertaken in the United Kingdom will provide crucial information in this regard. Furthermore, the potential for MenB vaccines to prevent infection by non-B serogroups appears promising, and the impact on other pathogenic Neisserial species with homologous surface proteins warrants further investigation. Overall, with the remaining burden of invasive meningococcal disease across Europe and other parts of the world, mostly of serogroup B meningococcus, new vaccines should highly be considered for broad use.
  128 in total

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Authors:  George Vernikos; Duccio Medini
Journal:  Pathog Glob Health       Date:  2014-10       Impact factor: 2.894

2.  The role of anti-NHba antibody in bactericidal activity elicited by the meningococcal serogroup B vaccine, MenB-4C.

Authors:  Elizabeth Partridge; Eduardo Lujan; Serena Giuntini; David M Vu; Dan M Granoff
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2017-06-23       Impact factor: 3.641

3.  Impact of an Immunization Campaign to Control an Increased Incidence of Serogroup B Meningococcal Disease in One Region of Quebec, Canada.

Authors:  Philippe De Wals; Geneviève Deceuninck; Brigitte Lefebvre; Raymond Tsang; Dennis Law; Gaston De Serres; Vladimir Gilca; Rodica Gilca; Nicole Boulianne
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2017-05-01       Impact factor: 9.079

4.  Evaluation of Mass Vaccination Clinics in Response to a Serogroup B Meningococcal Disease Outbreak at a Large, Public University-Oregon, 2015.

Authors:  Emily A Fisher; Tasha Poissant; Patrick Luedtke; Richard Leman; Collette Young; Paul Cieslak
Journal:  J Adolesc Health       Date:  2018-08       Impact factor: 5.012

5.  A Phase 2, Randomized, Active-controlled, Observer-blinded Study to Assess the Immunogenicity, Tolerability and Safety of Bivalent rLP2086, a Meningococcal Serogroup B Vaccine, Coadministered With Tetanus, Diphtheria and Acellular Pertussis Vaccine and Serogroup A, C, Y and W-135 Meningococcal Conjugate Vaccine in Healthy US Adolescents.

Authors:  Derek Muse; Shane Christensen; Prakash Bhuyan; Judith Absalon; Joseph J Eiden; Thomas R Jones; Laura J York; Kathrin U Jansen; Robert E O'Neill; Shannon L Harris; John L Perez
Journal:  Pediatr Infect Dis J       Date:  2016-06       Impact factor: 2.129

Review 6.  Global incidence of serogroup B invasive meningococcal disease: a systematic review.

Authors:  Shruti Sridhar; Brian Greenwood; Christopher Head; Stanley A Plotkin; Marco A Sáfadi; Samir Saha; Muhamed-Kheir Taha; Oyewale Tomori; Bradford D Gessner
Journal:  Lancet Infect Dis       Date:  2015-10-06       Impact factor: 25.071

7.  Safety, immunogenicity, and tolerability of meningococcal serogroup B bivalent recombinant lipoprotein 2086 vaccine in healthy adolescents: a randomised, single-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 2 trial.

Authors:  Peter C Richmond; Helen S Marshall; Michael D Nissen; Qin Jiang; Kathrin U Jansen; Maria Garcés-Sánchez; Federico Martinón-Torres; Johannes Beeslaar; Leszek Szenborn; Jacek Wysocki; Joseph Eiden; Shannon L Harris; Thomas R Jones; John L Perez
Journal:  Lancet Infect Dis       Date:  2012-05-07       Impact factor: 25.071

8.  Meningococcal Carriage Following a Vaccination Campaign With MenB-4C and MenB-FHbp in Response to a University Serogroup B Meningococcal Disease Outbreak-Oregon, 2015-2016.

Authors:  Lucy A McNamara; Jennifer Dolan Thomas; Jessica MacNeil; How Yi Chang; Michael Day; Emily Fisher; Stacey Martin; Tasha Poissant; Susanna E Schmink; Evelene Steward-Clark; Laurel T Jenkins; Xin Wang; Anna Acosta
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2017-11-27       Impact factor: 5.226

Review 9.  Routinely vaccinating adolescents against meningococcus: targeting transmission & disease.

Authors:  Volker Vetter; Roger Baxter; Gülhan Denizer; Marco A P Sáfadi; Sven-Arne Silfverdal; Andrew Vyse; Ray Borrow
Journal:  Expert Rev Vaccines       Date:  2016-03-04       Impact factor: 5.217

Review 10.  Persistence of the immune response after 4CMenB vaccination, and the response to an additional booster dose in infants, children, adolescents, and young adults.

Authors:  Federico Martinón-Torres; Terry Nolan; Daniela Toneatto; Angelika Banzhoff
Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother       Date:  2019-07-09       Impact factor: 3.452

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  10 in total

Review 1.  A comparison of national vaccination policies to prevent serogroup B meningococcal disease.

Authors:  Giorgia Sulis; Miranda Horn; Ray Borrow; Nicole E Basta
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2022-05-14       Impact factor: 4.169

Review 2.  Meningococcal disease and vaccination in college students.

Authors:  Sarah Schaffer DeRoo; Rachel G Torres; Linda Y Fu
Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother       Date:  2021-10-06       Impact factor: 4.526

3.  Review of clinical studies comparing meningococcal serogroup C immune responses induced by MenACWY-TT and monovalent serogroup C vaccines.

Authors:  Lidia Serra; Markus Knuf; Federico Martinón-Torres; Kevin Yi; Jamie Findlow
Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother       Date:  2021-02-19       Impact factor: 3.452

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Review 6.  A Decade of Fighting Invasive Meningococcal Disease: A Narrative Review of Clinical and Real-World Experience with the MenACWY-CRM Conjugate Vaccine.

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9.  TIPICO X: report of the 10th interactive infectious disease workshop on infectious diseases and vaccines.

Authors:  Irene Rivero-Calle; Jose Gómez-Rial; Louis Bont; Bradford D Gessner; Melvin Kohn; Ron Dagan; Daniel C Payne; Laia Bruni; Andrew J Pollard; Adolfo García-Sastre; Denise L Faustman; Albert Osterhaus; Robb Butler; Francisco Giménez Sánchez; Francisco Álvarez; Myrsini Kaforou; Xabier Bello; Federico Martinón-Torres
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10.  Safety and Immunogenicity of a Quadrivalent Meningococcal Conjugate Vaccine in Healthy Meningococcal-Naïve Children 2-9 Years of Age: A Phase III, Randomized Study.

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