| Literature DB >> 34614379 |
Javier Díez-Domingo1, Juan Carlos Tinoco2, Airi Poder3, Ener Cagri Dinleyici4, Haylene Nell5, Ignacio Salamanca de la Cueva6, Tolga Ince7, Edson Duarte Moreira8, Khatija Ahmed9, Kleber Luz10, Yulia Kovshirina11, Carlos Eduardo Medina Pech12, Tauseefullah Akhund13, Valerio Romolini14, Marco Costantini14, Thembile Mzolo15, Barry Kunnel16, Isabelle Lechevin17, Marianna Aggravi18, Paola Tiberi19, K Narendran20, Juan-Antonio García-Martínez21, Venere Basile22, Elena Fragapane13, Maria Lattanzi13, Michele Pellegrini13.
Abstract
A fully liquid MenACWY-CRM vaccine presentation has been developed, modifying the meningococcal serogroup A (MenA) component from lyophilized to liquid. The safety and immunogenicity of the liquid presentation at the end of the intended shelf-life (aged for 24 or 30 months) were compared to the licensed lyophilized/liquid presentation. This multicenter, randomized (1:1), observer-blind, phase 2b study (NCT03433482) enrolled adolescents and young adults (age 10-40 years). In part 1, 844 participants received one dose of liquid presentation stored for approximately 24 months or licensed presentation. In part 2, 846 participants received one dose of liquid presentation stored for approximately 30 months or licensed presentation. After storage, the MenA free saccharide (FS) level was approximately 25% and O-acetylation was approximately 45%. The primary objective was to demonstrate non-inferiority of the liquid presentation to licensed presentation, as measured by human serum bactericidal assay (hSBA) geometric mean titers (GMTs) against MenA, 1-month post-vaccination. Immune responses against each vaccine serogroup were similar between groups. Between-group ratios of hSBA GMTs for MenA were 1.21 (part 1) and 1.11 (part 2), with two-sided 95% confidence interval lower limits (0.94 and 0.87, respectively) greater than the prespecified non-inferiority margin (0.5), thus meeting the primary study objective. No safety concerns were identified. Despite reduced O-acetylation of MenA and increased FS content, serogroup-specific immune responses induced by the fully liquid presentation were similar to those induced by the licensed MenACWY-CRM vaccine, with non-inferior anti-MenA responses. The safety profiles of the vaccine presentations were similar.Entities:
Keywords: MenACWY-CRM; adolescents; human serum bactericidal assay; meningococcal serogroup A; non-inferiority
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34614379 PMCID: PMC8966988 DOI: 10.1080/21645515.2021.1981085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Vaccin Immunother ISSN: 2164-5515 Impact factor: 3.452
Figure 1.Study highlights.
Figure 2.Trial profile and demographic characteristics of vaccinated study participants. PPI, per-protocol population for immunogenicity.
Adjusted hSBA geometric mean titers (GMTs) 1-month post-vaccination and between-group ratios for groups that received MenACWY-CRM liquid vaccine aged for 24 or 30 months (ACWY_Liq24 and ACWY_Liq30) versus groups that received licensed MenACWY-CRM vaccine (ACWY_1 and ACWY_2) (per-protocol population for immunogenicity)
| ACWY_Liq24 | ACWY_1 | GMT ratio, ACWY_Liq24: ACWY_1 (95% CI) | ACWY_Liq30 | ACWY_2 | GMT ratio, ACWY_Liq30: ACWY_2 (95% CI) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | GMT (95% CI) | N | GMT (95% CI) | N | GMT (95% CI) | N | GMT (95% CI) | |||
| Overall | ||||||||||
| Serogroup A | 363 | 386.66 (319.47–467.97) | 373 | 318.34 (264.14–383.67) | 1.21 (0.94–1.57) | 356 | 387.06 (322.72–464.24) | 349 | 348.89 (290.09–419.61) | 1.11 (0.87–1.42) |
| Serogroup C | 385 | 143.48 (110.49–186.30) | 377 | 171.74 (131.74–223.87) | 0.84 (0.58–1.19) | 376 | 256.70 (195.29–337.41) | 377 | 226.09 (171.62–297.85) | 1.14 (0.79–1.64) |
| Serogroup W | 372 | 62.63 (50.99–76.92) | 388 | 66.37 (54.26–81.18) | 0.94 (0.72–1.24) | 374 | 83.23 (68.19–101.60) | 366 | 75.42 (61.56–92.41) | 1.10 (0.84–1.45) |
| Serogroup Y | 379 | 115.66 (94.13–142.13) | 390 | 106.47 (86.93–130.42) | 1.09 (0.82–1.44) | 386 | 112.38 (91.56–137.92) | 377 | 117.56 (95.39–144.89) | 0.96 (0.72–1.26) |
| Age 10–17 y | ||||||||||
| Serogroup A | 154 | 441.33 (338.41–575.54) | 153 | 422.96 (325.99–548.77) | 1.04 (0.74–1.47) | 151 | 397.32 (303.93–519.41) | 138 | 382.73 (288.50–507.73) | 1.04 (0.73–1.48) |
| Serogroup C | 159 | 201.13 (137.19–294.88) | 155 | 243.20 (165.65–357.06) | 0.83 (0.51–1.35) | 157 | 286.66 (181.94–451.65) | 153 | 366.56 (230.68–582.47) | 0.78 (0.44–1.40) |
| Serogroup W | 150 | 40.72 (29.84–55.55) | 158 | 51.38 (38.14–69.21) | 0.79 (0.53–1.18) | 151 | 71.12 (50.98–99.23) | 146 | 57.61 (40.85–81.24) | 1.23 (0.81–1.88) |
| Serogroup Y | 157 | 109.92 (80.31–150.46) | 157 | 112.85 (82.99–153.44) | 0.97 (0.65–1.46) | 155 | 123.01 (87.98–171.98) | 154 | 92.01 (65.47–129.30) | 1.34 (0.87–2.06) |
| Age 18–40 y | ||||||||||
| Serogroup A | 209 | 362.33 276.85–474.18) | 220 | 268.44 (206.90–348.30) | 1.35 (0.94–1.94) | 205 | 352.92 (273.22–455.86) | 211 | 307.22 (238.98–394.94) | 1.15 (0.82–1.61) |
| Serogroup C | 226 | 106.05 (75.27–149.43) | 222 | 125.38 (88.51–177.61) | 0.85 (0.53–1.36) | 219 | 221.98 (157.63–312.60) | 224 | 156.43 (110.92–220.63) | 1.42 (0.90–2.23) |
| Serogroup W | 222 | 85.60 (64.97–112.79) | 230 | 77.66 (59.13–102.00) | 1.10 (0.76–1.61) | 223 | 93.09 (71.32–121.52) | 220 | 89.60 (68.42–117.33) | 1.04 (0.73–1.48) |
| Serogroup Y | 222 | 124.26 (94.11–164.08) | 233 | 103.99 (79.17–136.58) | 1.19 (0.82–1.75) | 231 | 106.38 (81.03–139.65) | 223 | 134.99 (102.20–178.30) | 0.79 (0.55–1.13) |
CI, confidence interval; GMT, geometric mean titer; N, number of participants who received vaccination and had assay results available; y, years of age.
Figure 3.Percentages of participants (with 95% confidence intervals) with (a,b) human serum bactericidal assay (hSBA) titer ≥8 at 1-month post-vaccination and (c,d) four-fold increase in hSBA titer from baseline to 1-month post-vaccination against serogroups A, C, W, and Y (per-protocol population for immunogenicity).
Figure 4.Percentages of participants reporting solicited local and systemic adverse events within 7 days of vaccination (solicited safety population).
Figure 5.Number (percentage) of participants reporting unsolicited adverse events (AEs) during the 1-month and 6-month post-vaccination periods (unsolicited safety population).