Five-Year Immune Persistence of a Quadrivalent Meningococcal Conjugate Vaccine (MenACYW-TT) and Immunogenicity and Safety of a Booster Dose in Children.
Federico Martinón-Torres, Robert Simko, Rolf Ebert, Mika Rämet, Céline Zocchetti, Olga Syrkina, Siham Bchir, Isabelle Bertrand-Gerentes
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Many countries recommend vaccination against Neisseria meningitidis serogroups A, C, W, and Y in infants and young children to prevent invasive meningococcal disease. We evaluated the immunogenicity and safety of a quadrivalent meningococcal tetanus toxoid-conjugate vaccine (MenACYW-TT) booster in children primed with the same meningococcal vaccine 5 years earlier. Immune persistence following priming vaccination was also evaluated, and the study is ongoing to generate 10 years' post-priming data.
Methods: Healthy children, vaccinated with MenACYW-TT 5 years earlier as toddlers, were enrolled. Participants were randomized to receive MenACYW-TT booster (group 1) or no booster (group 2), stratified by country and meningococcal serogroup C (MenC) vaccination status (primed at age ≤ 1 year vs. naive). Antibodies against each serogroup were measured by serum bactericidal assay using human complement (hSBA). Seroresponse sufficiency at 30 days post-booster was demonstrated if the lower limit of the one-sided 97.5% confidence interval (CI) of the seroresponse rate (proportion of participants with post-vaccination titers ≥ 1:16 when baseline titers were < 1:8 or with a ≥ fourfold increase when baseline titers were ≥ 1:8) was > 75% for each serogroup. Seroprotection rates (proportion with hSBA titers ≥ 1:8) and geometric mean titers (GMTs) for each serogroup were also assessed.
Results: A total of 209 participants were enrolled across 26 sites in Finland, Germany, Hungary, and Spain (group 1, n = 93; group 2, n = 116). Five years post-priming, GMTs, and seroprotection rates were higher than those observed before priming vaccination in both groups, indicating long-term persistence. Booster seroresponse rates in group 1 for all serogroups ranged from 93.2% to 98.9%, with seroresponse sufficiency demonstrated (lower limit of one-sided 97.5% CIs for the seroresponse rates ranging from 85.7% to 93.8%). Seroprotection rates and GMTs post-booster increased across all serogroups, with nearly all participants seroprotected, suggesting adequate booster response. Seroresponse was comparable between MenC-primed and MenC-naive participants. No new safety concerns were identified.
Conclusions: MenACYW-TT provides long-term immune persistence and a robust immune response when administered as a booster in children primed 5 years earlier.
Trial registrations: Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT04936685; EudraCT: 2021-000104-38; WHO: U1111-1255-4941. Graphical abstract available for this article.
期刊介绍:
Infectious Diseases and Therapy is an international, open access, peer-reviewed, rapid publication journal dedicated to the publication of high-quality clinical (all phases), observational, real-world, and health outcomes research around the discovery, development, and use of infectious disease therapies and interventions, including vaccines and devices. Studies relating to diagnostic products and diagnosis, pharmacoeconomics, public health, epidemiology, quality of life, and patient care, management, and education are also encouraged.
Areas of focus include, but are not limited to, bacterial and fungal infections, viral infections (including HIV/AIDS and hepatitis), parasitological diseases, tuberculosis and other mycobacterial diseases, vaccinations and other interventions, and drug-resistance, chronic infections, epidemiology and tropical, emergent, pediatric, dermal and sexually-transmitted diseases.