| Literature DB >> 31632103 |
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.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
Main Characteristics Of Available MenB Vaccines:27,131 4cmenb And rLP2086
| 4CMenB Vaccine | rLP2086 Vaccine | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | From 6 to 8 weeks | From 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-protection | In 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 strains | In 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 strains |
| Number of components/antigens | 4 different components/antigens
Recombinant fusion protein comprised NHBA (peptide 2) and accessory protein 953 derived from Recombinant N. meningitidis group B NadA protein (fragment of the full-length protein derived from Recombinant fusion protein comprised fHbp (variant 1.1) and the accessory protein 936 derived from Outer membrane vesicle | 2 components, variants of 1 single antigen
Recombinant fHBP subfamily A (A05) Recombinant fHBP subfamily B (B01) |
| Nasopharyngeal impact | ± Preliminary data | No data available |
| Duration of protection | Immune persistence data | Immune persistence data |
| Special groups | Complement deficiencies, asplenia, splenic dysfunction, and those receiving eculizumab | No 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 prediction | MATS 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 activity | Serum bactericidal antibodies were measured with hSBA assays using 3 strains selected to measure responses to fHbp, NadA, or PorA. | 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). |
| 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 |
Protein Targets Of Currently Licensed Vaccines
| Protein Name | Class 1 Outer Membrane Protein | Factor H-binding Protein | Neisseria Adhesin A | Neisseria Heparin Binding Antigen |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gene Name | PorA | fHbp | NadA | NHBA |
| GNA Code | – | GNA1870 | GNA1994 | GNA2132 |
| Gene-Protein Acc code (PubMed) | Q9JPT2 | C6KHT4 | A0ELI2 | A0A024A437 |
| Function | Ion membrane channel. Main antigen in the outer membrane | Downregulation of complement cascade by recruitment of factor H | Bacterial adhesion and penetration into epithelium | Bacterial adhesion |
| Diversity (sub-classifications) | High diversity | Two main groups (fHbp A and fHbpB) | Genetically diverse with high antigenic diversity | Genetically diverse with high antigenic diversity |
| Immunogenicity and Antibody activity | Highly immunogenic | Immunogenic and has cross-reactivity but with autoantibodies (IgM) to factor H (clinical significance unknown) | Immunogenic but and antibodies can be crossreactive, though not consistently expressed in many circulating strains | Immunogenic but has contrasting evidence on bactericidal action of the antibody |
| Others | Determines the serosubtype of | Rare meningococcal strains were discovered to have no fHbp expression (Immune pressure selection) | Bactericidal activity of antibodies against NadA dependent on antigen expression rather than diversity | – |
| rLP2086 antigen | No | Yes* | No | No |
| 4CMenB antigen | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Notes: *RLP2086 final formulation includes two peptide variants, one of each family (A and B).
Key Clinical Trials On 4cmenb Vaccine
| Findlow 2010 | Snape 2010 | Kimura 2011 | Gossger 2012 | Vesikari 2013 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Study Characteristics | |||||
| Study Design | Phase II | Phase II | Phase II | Phase II2B | Phase III |
| Study subjects and age | Infants | Infants | Adults | Infants | Infants |
| Schedule (3 dose regimen) | 2, 4, 6, and 12 months of age | Day 0, day 60, and 12 months of age | Day 0, day 60, and 4 months | 2, 4, and 6 months of age | 2, 4, 6, and 12 months of age |
| Sample size (total) | 147 | 60 | 54 | 1885 | 3630 |
| (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) | 100% (24/24) | 97% (38/39) | 99% (521/525)** | 100% (1181/1181) |
| (H) Geometric mean titers | |||||
44/76-SL NZ98/254 5/99 | 30.0 (19.0–46.0) | 189 (136–263) | 95 (68–131) | 83 (77–90) | 91 (88–95) 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) | 10% (6/30) | – (0/50) | 83% (514/624) | 78% (1945/2480) |
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.
Key Clinical Trials On rLP2086 Vaccine
| Richmond 2012 | Nissen 2013 | Marshall 2013 | Vesikari 2016 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Study characteristics | |||||
| Study Design | Phase II | Phase II | Phase II | Phase III | |
| Study subjects and age | Adolescents | Children | Adults | Adolescents | |
| Dosing schedule | 0, 2, and 6 months | 0, 1, and 6 months | 0, 1, and 6 months | 0, 1, and 6 months | 0, 2, and 6 months |
| Sample size (total) | 538 | 127 | 55 | 426 | 414 |
| (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) | ** | ** | 88% (289/329) | 98% (332/339) |
| (E) Geometric mean titers | |||||
PMB2001 (A56) PMB80 (A22) PMB2707 (B44) PMB2948 (B24) | ** | ** | ** | 152.9 | 159.6 |
| (III) Safety endpoints | |||||
| Serious AE | 5% (1/22) | 7% (3/45) | ** | 3% (12/426) | 3% (14/414) |
| AEs | 8% (18/22) | 9% (42/45) | – | 27% (113/426) | 28% (115/414) |
Pyrexia Tenderness | – | 7% (3/45) | – | 1% (7/426) | <1% (3/414) |
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.
Real-World Data Of MenB Vaccination In Different Countries
| US | UK | Canada | Spain | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immunization Program | ||||
| Program | Campaign | Routine | Campaign | Recommended by the Spanish Pediatric Association |
| Area | Select colleges and universities | Nationwide | One region | Nationwide (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) |
| Vaccine | rLP2086 or 4CMenB | 4CMenB | 4CMenB | 4CMen B |
| Vaccine schedule | 3 doses (rLP2086) | 3 doses (2 months4 months12 months) | 4 doses (2 months–4 months–6 months–12 months) | 4 doses (2 months–4 months–6 months–12 to 15 months) |
| Immunization coverage | ~60% No data | 95.5% 88.6% | 83% 77% |
(a) - |
| Vaccine Effects and Safety | ||||
| Effectiveness | — | VE 82·9% (95% CI 24.1 to 95.2) | VE 79% (95% CI: −231% to 99%) | — |
| Impact | Asymptomatic 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/100,000 | Reduction 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 2017 Soeters CID 2017 Fisher J Adol Health 2018 | Bryan Lancet Child Adolesc Health 2018 Parikh Lancet 2016 | Serres INSPQ Serres Vaccine 2018 De Wals CID 2017 INSPQ | RENAVE 2017–2018, Moreno-Perez, 2015 Abad 2012 GTV 2019 |
Note: *Impact through a cost-effectiveness assessment modeling.