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Characterization of potential biomarkers of reactogenicity of licensed antiviral vaccines : randomized controlled clinical trials conducted by the BIOVACSAFE consortium

Characterization of potential biomarkers of reactogenicity of licensed antiviral vaccines : randomized controlled clinical trials conducted by the BIOVACSAFE consortium


Titill: Characterization of potential biomarkers of reactogenicity of licensed antiviral vaccines : randomized controlled clinical trials conducted by the BIOVACSAFE consortium
Höfundur: Weiner, January
Lewis, David J.M.
Maertzdorf, Jeroen
Mollenkopf, Hans Joachim
Bodinham, Caroline
Pizzoferro, Kat
Linley, Catherine
Greenwood, Aldona
Mantovani, Alberto
Bottazzi, Barbara
... 7 fleiri höfundar Sýna alla höfunda
Útgáfa: 2019-12-01
Tungumál: Enska
Umfang: 3932863
Háskóli/Stofnun: Landspitali - The National University Hospital of Iceland
Deild: Faculty of Medicine
Clinical Laboratory Services, Diagnostics and Blood Bank
Birtist í: Scientific Reports; 9(1)
ISSN: 2045-2322
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-56994-8
Efnisorð: Multidisciplinary
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/3504

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Tilvitnun:

Weiner , J , Lewis , D J M , Maertzdorf , J , Mollenkopf , H J , Bodinham , C , Pizzoferro , K , Linley , C , Greenwood , A , Mantovani , A , Bottazzi , B , Denoel , P , Leroux-Roels , G , Kester , K E , Jonsdottir , I , van den Berg , R , Kaufmann , S H E & Del Giudice , G 2019 , ' Characterization of potential biomarkers of reactogenicity of licensed antiviral vaccines : randomized controlled clinical trials conducted by the BIOVACSAFE consortium ' , Scientific Reports , vol. 9 , no. 1 , 20362 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-56994-8

Útdráttur:

Biomarkers predictive of inflammatory events post-vaccination could accelerate vaccine development. Within the BIOVACSAFE framework, we conducted three identically designed, placebo-controlled inpatient/outpatient clinical studies (NCT01765413/NCT01771354/NCT01771367). Six antiviral vaccination strategies were evaluated to generate training data-sets of pre-/post-vaccination vital signs, blood changes and whole-blood gene transcripts, and to identify putative biomarkers of early inflammation/reactogenicity that could guide the design of subsequent focused confirmatory studies. Healthy adults (N = 123; 20–21/group) received one immunization at Day (D)0. Alum-adjuvanted hepatitis B vaccine elicited vital signs and inflammatory (CRP/innate cells) responses that were similar between primed/naive vaccinees, and low-level gene responses. MF59-adjuvanted trivalent influenza vaccine (ATIV) induced distinct physiological (temperature/heart rate/reactogenicity) response-patterns not seen with non-adjuvanted TIV or with the other vaccines. ATIV also elicited robust early (D1) activation of IFN-related genes (associated with serum IP-10 levels) and innate-cell-related genes, and changes in monocyte/neutrophil/lymphocyte counts, while TIV elicited similar but lower responses. Due to viral replication kinetics, innate gene activation by live yellow-fever or varicella-zoster virus (YFV/VZV) vaccines was more suspended, with early IFN-associated responses in naïve YFV-vaccine recipients but not in primed VZV-vaccine recipients. Inflammatory responses (physiological/serum markers, innate-signaling transcripts) are therefore a function of the vaccine type/composition and presence/absence of immune memory. The data reported here have guided the design of confirmatory Phase IV trials using ATIV to provide tools to identify inflammatory or reactogenicity biomarkers.

Athugasemdir:

Funding text The authors are grateful for the vital contributions of the participating study volunteers, clinicians, nurses, and laboratory technicians at the Surrey study site. The work by Roberto Leone, laboratory technician at Humanitas Clinical and Research Center, is gratefully acknowledged. Finally, they thank Ellen Oe (GSK) for scientific writing assistance. The research leading to these results has received support from the Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking under grant agreement n°115308, resources of which are composed of financial contribution from the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013) and EFPIA companies’ in-kind contribution. The contribution of the European Commission to the Advanced Immunization Technologies (ADITEC) project (grant agreement n° 280873) is also gratefully acknowledged. Publisher Copyright: © 2019, The Author(s).

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