Ray Borrow, Laura Tomasi Cont, Daniela Toneatto, Stefania Bambini, Shravani Bobde, Woo-Yun Sohn, Alessia Biolchi, Vega Masignani, Peter T Beernink, Maria Lattanzi
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Methods to evaluate the performance of a multicomponent meningococcal serogroup B vaccine.
Meningococcal serogroup B (MenB) vaccine licensure was based on the assessment of vaccine-induced immune responses by human serum bactericidal antibody (hSBA) assay against a small number of antigen-specific strains complemented by strain coverage predictions. However, the evaluation of vaccine strain coverage is challenging because of genotypic and phenotypic diversity in surface-exposed MenB strain antigens. This narrative review considers the principal methods applied to assess the performance of a multicomponent MenB vaccine at different stages of its development. Traditional hSBA assay against a limited panel of strains is useful at all stages, while predicted strain coverage methods, such as the meningococcal antigen typing system, are used independent of clinical trials. A new method, the endogenous complement hSBA assay, has been developed to evaluate a vaccine's ability to induce a bactericidal immune response in clinical trials, in conditions that approximate real-world settings through the use of each vaccinee's serum as a source of complement and by testing against a panel of 110 epidemiologically representative MenB strains. Each assay, therefore, has a different scope during the vaccine's development and all complement each other, enabling comprehensive evaluation of the performance of multicomponent MenB vaccines, in advance of real-world evidence of vaccine effectiveness and vaccine impact.
期刊介绍:
mSphere™ is a multi-disciplinary open-access journal that will focus on rapid publication of fundamental contributions to our understanding of microbiology. Its scope will reflect the immense range of fields within the microbial sciences, creating new opportunities for researchers to share findings that are transforming our understanding of human health and disease, ecosystems, neuroscience, agriculture, energy production, climate change, evolution, biogeochemical cycling, and food and drug production. Submissions will be encouraged of all high-quality work that makes fundamental contributions to our understanding of microbiology. mSphere™ will provide streamlined decisions, while carrying on ASM''s tradition for rigorous peer review.