| Literature DB >> 33487470 |
Ruiju Jiang1, Xiaoqiang Liu2, Xiaodong Sun3, Jianfeng Wang4, Zhuoying Huang5, Changgui Li4, Zhi Li6, Jianmei Zhou7, Yi Pu8, Zhifang Ying4, Qiongzhou Yin9, Zhimei Zhao9, Lifeng Zhang2, Jing Lei8, Wenmei Bao8, Ya Jiang7, Youjian Dou7, Jingyu Li2, Haitao Yang2, Wei Cai10, Yan Deng11, Yanchun Che12, Li Shi13, Mingbo Sun14.
Abstract
As a recently launched novel vaccine used as one of the vaccines for the final eradication of polios worldwide, complete data on the consistency and immunogenicity characteristics of the inactivated poliomyelitis vaccine made from the Sabin strain (sIPV) and its safety in large-scale populations are required to support the future use of this vaccine worldwide. A phase IV clinical trial was conducted to perform an immunogenicity evaluation of lot-to-lot consistency of three commercial batches of sIPV in 1200 infants and to investigate the vaccine's safety on a large-scale in 20,019 infants for active monitoring and 29,683 infants for passive monitoring through the Adverse Event Following Immunization (AEFI) reporting system in China. In the immunogenicity evaluation, the average seroconversion rates for type I, type II and type III of the three groups were 99.83%, 98.93% and 99.44%, respectively. No differences in the seroconversion rate and the GMT ratios were noted in the pair-to-pair comparisons. In the large-scale safety evaluation, most adverse reactions occurred 0-30 days after the first doses, and the common local and systemic reactions were similar to those in the phase III clinical trial, with low incidence in both activated and passive monitoring. In conclusion, sIPV exhibits good lot-to-lot consistency and safety in large-scale populations; thus, it is qualified to serve as one of the vaccines for use in eradicating all wild and vaccine-derived polioviruses worldwide in the near future. Clinic Trial Registration. NCT04224519 and NCT04220515.Entities:
Keywords: Lot-to-lot consistency; Phase IV clinical trial; Safety in a large population; sIPV
Year: 2021 PMID: 33487470 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2021.01.027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641