| Literature DB >> 34741103 |
Benjamin Lee1,2, Md Abdul Kader3, E Ross Colgate4,5, Marya Carmolli5, Dorothy M Dickson4,5, Sean A Diehl5, Masud Alam3, Sajia Afreen3, Josyf C Mychaleckyj6, Uma Nayak6, William A Petri7, Rashidul Haque3, Beth D Kirkpatrick4,5.
Abstract
Group A rotaviruses (RVA) remain a leading cause of pediatric diarrhea worldwide, in part due to underperformance of currently approved live-attenuated, oral vaccines in low-and-middle income countries. Improved immune correlates of protection (CoP) for existing oral vaccines and novel strategies to evaluate the performance of next-generation vaccines are needed. Use of oral vaccines as challenge agents in controlled human infection models is a potential approach to CoP discovery that remains underexplored. In a live-attenuated, oral rotavirus vaccine (Rotarix, GlaxoSmithKline) efficacy trial conducted among infants in Dhaka, Bangladesh, we explored the potential for the second dose of the two-dose series to be considered a challenge agent through which RVA immunity could be explored, using fecal virus shedding post-dose 2 as a marker of mucosal immunity. Among 180 vaccinated infants who completed the parent study per protocol, the absence of fecal vaccine shedding following the second dose of Rotarix suggested intestinal mucosal immunity generated by the first dose and a decreased risk of RVA diarrhea through 2 years of life (RR 0.616, 95% CI 0.392-0.968). Further development of controlled human infection models for group A rotaviruses, especially in prospective studies with larger sample sizes, may be a promising tool to assess rotavirus vaccine efficacy and CoPs.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34741103 PMCID: PMC8571310 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-01288-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
RVA diarrhea between 18 and 104 weeks in vaccinated infants following Rotarix dose 2.
| RVA diarrhea N (%) | No RVA diarrhea N (%) | RR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| No shedding | 38 (26%) | 106 (74%) | 0.679 (0.415–1.110) |
| Shedding | 14 (39%) | 22 (61%) | – |
| No shedding | 31 (24%) | 96 (76%) | 0.616 (0.392–0.968) |
| Shedding | 21 (40%) | 32 (60%) | – |
| Seropositive | 7 (18%) | 33 (83%) | 0.533 (0.261–1.090) |
| Seronegative | 44 (33%) | 90 (73%) | – |
| No shedding OR seropositive | 39 (27%) | 108 (73%) | 0.597 (0.362–0.984) |
| Shedding AND seronegative | 12 (44%) | 15 (56%) | – |
| No shedding AND seropositive | 5 (16%) | 27 (84%) | 0.482 (0.208–1.117) |
| Shedding OR seronegative | 46 (32%) | 96 (68%) | – |
Seropositive: RVA-IgA ≥ 20 U/mL; seronegative: RVA-IgA < 20 U/mL.
CI confidence interval, Ct cycle threshold, RR relative risk, RVA group A rotavirus.
Figure 1Time to first episode of RVA diarrhea among vaccinated infants 18–104 weeks of life. (A) Kaplan–Meier curve of time to first episode of RVA diarrhea in children with (blue line) or without (red line) fecal RVA shedding following Rotarix dose 2. (B) Kaplan–Meier curve of time to first episode of RVA diarrhea in children who were RVA-IgA seronegative (< 20 U/mL, blue line) or seropositive (≥ 20 U/mL, red line) at week 18 of life. (C) Kaplan–Meier curve of time to first episode of RVA diarrhea in children with both fecal RVA shedding following Rotarix dose 2 and who were RVA-IgA seronegative (blue line) or children who either inhibited fecal RVA shedding following Rotarix dose 2 or were RVA-IgA seropositive (red line). (D) Kaplan–Meier curve of time to first episode of RVA diarrhea in children with fecal RVA shedding following Rotarix dose 2 or who were RVA-IgA seronegative (blue line) or children who both inhibited fecal RVA shedding following Rotarix dose 2 and were RVA-IgA seropositive (red line). CI confidence interval, HR hazard ratio. Kaplan–Meier estimators followed by log-rank test was performed using GraphPad Prism version 9.2.0 for Windows (GraphPad Software, San Diego, CA, USA; https://www.graphpad.com/).