| Literature DB >> 31951771 |
Innocent Valéa1,2, Samuel Adjei3, Effua Usuf4, Ousmane Traore1, Daniel Ansong3, Halidou Tinto1, Harry Owusu Boateng3, Athanase Mwinessobaonfou Some1, Patrick Buabeng3, Johan Vekemans4, Amos Kotey3, Pascale Vandoolaeghe4, Mark Cullinane4, Magali Traskine4, Florence Ouedraogo1, David Sambian3, Marc Lievens4, Marc Christian Tahita1, Erik Jongert4, Palpouguini Lompo1, Ali Idriss3, Dorota Borys4, Sayouba Ouedraogo1, Frank Prempeh3, Lode Schuerman4, Hermann Sorgho1, Tsiri Agbenyega3.
Abstract
RTS,S/AS01E malaria vaccine contains the hepatitis B virus surface antigen and may thus serve as a potential hepatitis B vaccine. To evaluate the impact of RTS,S/AS01E when implemented in the Expanded Program of Immunization, infants 8-12 weeks old were randomized to receive either RTS,S/AS01E or a licensed hepatitis B control vaccine (HepB), both co-administered with various combinations of the following childhood vaccines: diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis-Haemophilus influenzae type b, trivalent oral poliovirus, pneumococcal non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae protein D conjugate and human rotavirus vaccine. Long-term persistence of antibodies against the circumsporozoite (CS) protein and hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) were assessed, together with the immune memory response to the HB antigen following a booster dose of HepB vaccine. Subgroups receiving RTS,S or the HepB control vaccine were pooled into RTS,S groups and HepB groups, respectively. One month post-HepB booster vaccination, 100% of participants in the RTS,S groups and 98.3% in the control groups had anti-HBs antibody concentrations ≥10 mIU/mL with the geometric mean concentrations (GMCs) at 46634.7 mIU/mL (95% CI: 40561.3; 53617.6) and 9258.2 mIU/mL (95% CI: 6925.3; 12377.0), respectively. Forty-eight months post-primary vaccination anti-CS antibody GMCs ranged from 2.3 EU/mL to 2.7 EU/mL in the RTS,S groups compared to 1.1 EU/mL in the control groups. Hepatitis B priming with the RTS,S/AS01E vaccine was effective and resulted in a memory response to HBsAg as shown by the robust booster response following an additional dose of HepB vaccine. RTS,S/AS01E when co-administered with PHiD-CV, HRV and other childhood vaccines, had an acceptable safety profile.Entities:
Keywords: Expanded Program on Immunization; Malaria; RTS; S/AS01E ; hepatitis B; long-term immunogenicity; safety; vaccine
Year: 2020 PMID: 31951771 PMCID: PMC7482624 DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2019.1695457
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Vaccin Immunother ISSN: 2164-5515 Impact factor: 3.452
Demographic characteristics per primary vaccination with RTS,S/AS01E or HepB and co-administered vaccines (ATP cohort for immunogenicity – FU2).
| Characteristics | Parameters | Group R1 | Group R2 | Group R3 | Group C1 | Group C2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Co-administered vaccines | RTS,S | RTS,S | RTS,S | HepB | HepB | |
| Staggered vaccines (2 weeks later) | HRV | PHiD-CV | PHiD-CV | HRV | PHiD-CV | |
| Age at HepB booster vaccination (years) | Mean (SD) | 4.3 (0.0) | 4.3 (0.0) | 4.3 (0.0) | 4.3 (0.0) | 4.3 (0.0) |
| Gender | Male, n (%) | 81 (61.8) | 53 (47.7) | 68 (55.7) | 55 (43.3) | 61 (57.0) |
| | Female, n (%) | 50 (38.2) | 58 (52.3) | 54 (44.3) | 72 (56.7) | 46 (43.0) |
| | | RTS,S | Control | |||
| Age at HepB booster vaccination (years) | Mean (SD) | 4.3 (0.0) | 4.3 (0.0) | |||
| Gender | Male, n (%) | 202 (55.5) | 116 (49.6) | |||
| Female, n (%) | 162 (44.5) | 118 (50.4) | ||||
ATP, according-to-protocol; DTaP/Hib, diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis- Haemophilus influenzae type b; FU2, follow-up 2; HepB, hepatitis B vaccine; HRV, human rotavirus vaccine; RTS,S/AS01E, malaria vaccine; SD, standard deviation; N, total number of participants; n (%), number (percentage) of participants in the specified category. PHiD-CV, pneumococcal non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae protein D conjugate vaccine; tOPV, trivalent oral poliovirus vaccine;
RTS,S, all study groups who received primary vaccination with RTS,S/AS01E; control, all study groups who received primary vaccination with HepB.
Figure 1.Participants flowchart.
Anti-HBs seroprotection rates and antibody GMCs following HepB booster vaccination at 4 years post-primary in participants who previously received primary vaccination with RTS,S/AS01E or HepB (ATP cohort for immunogenicity).
| Group | Timing | N | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | GMC, |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RTS,S | Pre-vaccination | 398 | 20.9 (17.0; 25.2) | 15.8 (12.4; 19.8) | 4.3 (2.5; 6.8) | 5.0 (4.5; 5.7) |
| 1 month post-dose 3 | 397 | 100 (99.1; 100) | 100 (99.1; 100) | 100 (99.1; 100) | 6412.7 (5732.9; 7173.0) | |
| 12 months post-dose 3 | 380 | 100 (99.0; 100) | 100 (99.0; 100) | 98.9 (97.3; 99.7) | 1995.0 (1784.5; 2230.5) | |
| 24 months post-dose 3 | 365 | 100 (99.0; 100) | 100 (99.0; 100) | 96.4 (94.0; 98.1) | 1540.4 (1345.1; 1764.1) | |
| 36 months post-dose 3 | 355 | 99.7 (98.4; 100) | 99.4 (98.0; 99.9) | 94.9 (92.1; 97.0) | 896.6 (780.2;1030.3) | |
| 48 months post-dose 3 | 361 | 99.4 (98.0; 99.9) | 99.4 (98.0; 99.9) | 92.0 (88.7; 94.6) | 669.8 (579.7; 773.9) | |
| 1 month post-booster HepB | 362 | 100 (99.0; 100) | 100 (99.0; 100) | 99.4 (98.0; 99.9) | 46634.7 (40561.3; 53617.6) | |
| Control | Pre-vaccination | 251 | 22.7 (17.7; 28.4) | 17.9 (13.4; 23.2) | 5.6 (3.1; 9.2) | 5.4 (4.7; 6.4) |
| 1 month post-dose 3 | 253 | 97.2 (94.4; 98.9) | 96.0 (92.9; 98.1) | 83.4 (78.2; 87.8) | 377.4 (310.6; 458.7) | |
| 12 months post-dose 3 | 241 | 94.6 (91.0; 97.1) | 92.9 (88.9; 95.8) | 63.5 (57.1; 69.6) | 127.7 (105.0; 155.4) | |
| 24 months post-dose 3 | 235 | 88.5 (83.7; 92.3) | 83.8 (78.5; 88.3) | 46.4 (39.9; 53.0) | 69.8 (56.1; 86.9) | |
| 36 months post-dose 3 | 230 | 83.0 (77.6; 87.7) | 77.4 (71.4; 82.6) | 31.3 (25.4; 37.7) | 40.0 (32.2; 49.7) | |
| 48 months post-dose 3 | 233 | 79.4 (73.6; 84.4) | 73.8 (67.7; 79.3) | 24.0 (18.7; 30.0) | 30.8 (24.9; 38.1) | |
| 1 month post-booster HepB | 229 | 98.3 (95.6; 99.5) | 98.3 (95.6; 99.5) | 95.6 (92.1; 97.9) | 9258.2 (6925.3; 12377.0) |
ATP, according-to-protocol; CI, confidence interval; FU, follow-up; GMC, geometric mean antibody concentration; HepB, hepatitis B vaccine; IU, international unit; M, month; N, total number of participants; %, percentage of participants with antibody concentrations above the specified cutoff; RTS,S/AS01E, malaria vaccine. RTS,S groups, all study groups who received primary vaccination with RTS,S/AS01E; control, all study groups who received primary vaccination with HepB; post-dose 3, blood sampling after the third dose, x months after primary vaccination course; post-booster HepB, blood sampling 1 month after HepB booster dose.
Seropositivity rate and GMCs for anti-HBs RF1-like antibodies in participants who received primary vaccination with RTS,S/AS01E versus HepB, at 1 month after primary vaccination and 1 month after HepB booster dose (ATP cohort for immunogenicity-FU2).
| Group | Timing | N | % (95% CI) | GMC, |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RTS,S | 1 month post-dose 3 | 362 | 97.5 (95.3; 98.9) | 306.9 (276.0; 341.3) |
| 1 month post-booster HepB | 341 | 95.0 (92.1; 97.1) | 415.7 (362.2; 476.9) | |
| Control | 1 month post-dose 3 | 232 | 35.3 (29.2; 41.9) | 27.1 (24.5; 29.9) |
| 1 month post-booster HepB | 202 | 72.8 (66.1; 78.8) | 123.9 (99.1; 155.0) |
ATP, according-to-protocol; CI, confidence interval; EU, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay unit; FU2, follow-up 2; GMC, geometric mean concentration; HepB, hepatitis B vaccine; anti-HBs, antibodies to the hepatitis B surface antigen; M, month; N, total number of participants; %, percentage of participants with antibody concentration equal to or above the specified cut off.
RTS,S, all study groups who received primary vaccination with RTS,S/AS01E; control, all study groups who received primary vaccination with HepB; post-dose 3, blood sampling one month after primary vaccination course.
Figure 2.Focus on patient section.