| Literature DB >> 33335322 |
Jordan R Barrett1, Sandra Belij-Rammerstorfer1, Christina Dold2, Katie J Ewer1, Pedro M Folegatti1, Ciaran Gilbride1, Rachel Halkerston3, Jennifer Hill2, Daniel Jenkin4, Lisa Stockdale2, Marije K Verheul2, Catherine M Green5, Adrian V S Hill1, Teresa Lambe1, Sarah Gilbert1, Andrew J Pollard6, Parvinder K Aley2, Brian Angus7, Duncan Bellamy1, Eleanor Berrie5, Sagida Bibi2, Mustapha Bittaye1, Miles W Carroll5, Breeze Cavell3, Elizabeth A Clutterbuck2, Nick Edwards1, Amy Flaxman1, Michelle Fuskova1, Andrew Gorringe3, Bassam Hallis3, Simon Kerridge1, Alison M Lawrie1, Aline Linder2, Xinxue Liu2, Meera Madhavan1, Rebecca Makinson1, Jack Mellors3, Angela Minassian1, Maria Moore2, Yama Mujadidi2, Emma Plested2, Ian Poulton1, Maheshi N Ramasamy2, Hannah Robinson2, Christine S Rollier2, Rinn Song2, Matthew D Snape2, Richard Tarrant5, Stephen Taylor3, Kelly M Thomas3, Merryn Voysey2, Marion E E Watson1, Daniel Wright1, Alexander D Douglas1.
Abstract
More than 190 vaccines are currently in development to prevent infection by the novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. Animal studies suggest that while neutralizing antibodies against the viral spike protein may correlate with protection, additional antibody functions may also be important in preventing infection. Previously, we reported early immunogenicity and safety outcomes of a viral vector coronavirus vaccine, ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 (AZD1222), in a single-blinded phase 1/2 randomized controlled trial of healthy adults aged 18-55 years ( NCT04324606 ). Now we describe safety and exploratory humoral and cellular immunogenicity of the vaccine, from subgroups of volunteers in that trial, who were subsequently allocated to receive a homologous full-dose (SD/SD D56; n = 20) or half-dose (SD/LD D56; n = 32) ChAdOx1 booster vaccine 56 d following prime vaccination. Previously reported immunogenicity data from the open-label 28-d interval prime-boost group (SD/SD D28; n = 10) are also presented to facilitate comparison. Additionally, we describe volunteers boosted with the comparator vaccine (MenACWY; n = 10). In this interim report, we demonstrate that a booster dose of ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 is safe and better tolerated than priming doses. Using a systems serology approach we also demonstrate that anti-spike neutralizing antibody titers, as well as Fc-mediated functional antibody responses, including antibody-dependent neutrophil/monocyte phagocytosis, complement activation and natural killer cell activation, are substantially enhanced by a booster dose of vaccine. A booster dose of vaccine induced stronger antibody responses than a dose-sparing half-dose boost, although the magnitude of T cell responses did not increase with either boost dose. These data support the two-dose vaccine regime that is now being evaluated in phase 3 clinical trials.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33335322 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-020-01179-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440