Huttner Angela, Dayer Julie-Anne, Yerly Sabine, Combescure Christophe, Auderset Floriane, Desmeules Jules, Eickmann Markus, Finckh Axel, Goncalves Ana Rita, Hooper Jay W, Kaya Gürkan, Krähling Verena, Kwilas Steve, Lemaître Barbara, Matthey Alain, Silvera Peter, Becker Stephan, Fast Patricia E, Moorthy Vasee, Kieny Marie Paule, Kaiser Laurent, Siegrist Claire-Anne
Infection Control Programme, Geneva University Hospitals and Faculty of Medicine, Geneva, Switzerland; Division of Infectious Diseases, Geneva University Hospitals and Faculty of Medicine, Geneva, Switzerland.
Division of Infectious Diseases, Geneva University Hospitals and Faculty of Medicine, Geneva, Switzerland.
Lancet Infect Dis. 2015 Oct;15(10):1156-1166. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(15)00154-1. Epub 2015 Aug 4.
Safe and effective vaccines against Ebola could prevent or control outbreaks. The safe use of replication-competent vaccines requires a careful dose-selection process. We report the first safety and immunogenicity results in volunteers receiving 3 × 10(5) plaque-forming units (pfu) of the recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus-based candidate vaccine expressing the Zaire Ebola virus glycoprotein (rVSV-ZEBOV; low-dose vaccinees) compared with 59 volunteers who had received 1 ×10(7) pfu (n=35) or 5 × 10(7) pfu (n=16) of rVSV-ZEBOV (high-dose vaccinees) or placebo (n=8) before a safety-driven study hold.
The Geneva rVSV-ZEBOV study, an investigator-initiated phase 1/2, dose-finding, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial conducted at the University Hospitals of Geneva, Switzerland, enrolled non-pregnant, immunocompetent, and otherwise healthy adults aged 18-65 years. Participants from the low-dose group with no plans to deploy to Ebola-aff5cted regions (non-deployable) were randomised 9:1 in a double-blind fashion using randomly permuted blocks of varying sizes to a single injection of 3 × 10(5) pfu or placebo, whereas deployable participants received single-injection 3 × 10(5) pfu open-label. Primary safety and immunogenicity outcomes were the incidence of adverse events within 14 days of vaccination and day-28 antibody titres, respectively, analysed by intention to treat. After viral oligoarthritis was observed in 11 of the first 51 vaccinees (22%) receiving 10(7) or 5 × 10(7) pfu, 56 participants were given a lower dose (3 × 10(5) pfu, n=51) or placebo (n=5) to assess the effect of dose reduction on safety and immunogenicity. This trial is ongoing with a follow-up period of 12 months; all reported results are from interim databases. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02287480.
Between Jan 5 and Jan 26, 2015, 43 non-deployable participants received low-dose rVSV-ZEBOV (3 × 10(5) pfu) or placebo in a double-blind fashion, whereas 13 deployable participants received 3 × 10(5) pfu open-label. Altogether, in the low-dose group, 51 participants received rVSV-ZEBOV and five received placebo. No serious adverse events occurred. At 3 × 10(5) pfu, early-onset reactogenicity remained frequent (45 [88%] of 51 compared with 50 [98%] of 51 high dose and two [15%] of 13 placebo recipients), but mild. Objective fever was present in one (2%) of 51 low-dose versus 13 (25%) of 51 high-dose vaccinees receiving at least 1 ×10(7) pfu (p<0·0001). Subjective fever (p<0·0001), myalgia (p=0·036), and chills (p=0·026) were significantly reduced and their time of onset delayed, reflecting significantly lower viraemia (p<0·0001) and blood monocyte-activation patterns (p=0·0233). Although seropositivity rates remained similarly high (48 [94%] of 51), day-28 EBOV-glycoprotein-binding and neutralising antibody titres were lower in low-dose versus high-dose vaccinees (geometric mean titres 344·5 [95% CI 229·7-516·4] vs 1064·2 [757·6-1495·1]; p<0·0001; and 35·1 [24·7-50·7] vs 127·0 [86·0-187·6]; p<0·0001, respectively). Furthermore, oligoarthritis again occurred on day 10 (median; IQR 9-14) in 13 (25%) of 51 low-dose vaccinees, with maculopapular, vesicular dermatitis, or both in seven (54%) of 13; arthritis was associated with increasing age in low-dose but not high-dose vaccinees. Two vaccinees presented with purpura of the lower legs; histological findings indicated cutaneous vasculitis. The presence of rVSV in synovial fluid and skin lesions confirmed causality.
Reducing the dose of rVSV-ZEBOV improved its early tolerability but lowered antibody responses and did not prevent vaccine-induced arthritis, dermatitis, or vasculitis. Like its efficacy, the safety of rVSV-ZEBOV requires further definition in the target populations of Africa.
Wellcome Trust through WHO.
安全有效的埃博拉疫苗可预防或控制疫情。安全使用具有复制能力的疫苗需要谨慎的剂量选择过程。我们报告了首批安全性和免疫原性结果,这些结果来自接受3×10⁵空斑形成单位(pfu)基于重组水疱性口炎病毒的候选疫苗(表达扎伊尔埃博拉病毒糖蛋白,rVSV-ZEBOV;低剂量接种者)的志愿者,将其与59名之前在一项由安全性驱动的研究暂停前接受1×10⁷ pfu(n = 35)或5×10⁷ pfu(n = 16)的rVSV-ZEBOV(高剂量接种者)或安慰剂(n = 8)的志愿者进行比较。
日内瓦rVSV-ZEBOV研究是一项由研究者发起的1/2期、剂量探索、安慰剂对照、双盲试验,在瑞士日内瓦大学医院进行,纳入年龄在18 - 65岁的非妊娠、免疫功能正常且其他方面健康的成年人。来自低剂量组且无计划前往埃博拉疫区(不可部署)的参与者以9:1的比例采用不同大小的随机排列区组进行双盲随机分组,分别接受单次注射3×10⁵ pfu或安慰剂,而可部署的参与者接受单次注射3×10⁵ pfu的开放标签注射。主要安全性和免疫原性结局分别是接种疫苗后14天内不良事件的发生率和第28天的抗体滴度,采用意向性分析。在首批接受10⁷或5×10⁷ pfu的51名接种者中有11名(22%)出现病毒性寡关节炎后,56名参与者接受了较低剂量(3×10⁵ pfu,n = 51)或安慰剂(n = 5)以评估剂量降低对安全性和免疫原性的影响。该试验正在进行,随访期为12个月;所有报告的结果均来自中期数据库。本研究已在ClinicalTrials.gov注册,编号为NCT02287480。
2015年1月5日至1月26日期间,43名不可部署的参与者以双盲方式接受低剂量rVSV-ZEBOV(3×10⁵ pfu)或安慰剂,而13名可部署的参与者接受3×10⁵ pfu的开放标签注射。总体而言,在低剂量组中,51名参与者接受rVSV-ZEBOV,5名接受安慰剂。未发生严重不良事件。在3×10⁵ pfu剂量下,早期反应原性仍然常见(51名中的45名[88%],相比高剂量组51名中的50名[98%]和13名安慰剂接受者中的2名[15%]),但程度较轻。在接受至少1×10⁷ pfu的51名低剂量接种者中有1名(2%)出现客观发热,而高剂量接种者中有13名(25%)出现发热(p<0.0001)。主观发热(p<0.0001)、肌痛(p = 0.036)和寒战(p = 0.026)显著减少且发作时间延迟,这反映出病毒血症(p<0.0001)和血液单核细胞激活模式显著降低(p = 0.0233)。尽管血清阳性率仍然同样高(51名中的48名[94%]),但低剂量接种者与高剂量接种者相比,第28天埃博拉病毒糖蛋白结合和中和抗体滴度较低(几何平均滴度分别为344.5 [95% CI 229.7 - 516.4] 与1064.2 [757.6 - 1495.1];p<0.0001;以及35.1 [24.7 - 50.7] 与127.0 [86.0 - 187.6];p<0.0001)。此外,51名低剂量接种者中有13名(25%)在第10天(中位数;IQR 9 - 14)再次出现寡关节炎,13名中有7名(54%)出现斑丘疹、水疱性皮炎或两者皆有;在低剂量接种者中关节炎与年龄增加有关,而在高剂量接种者中并非如此。两名接种者出现小腿紫癜;组织学检查结果表明为皮肤血管炎。滑液和皮肤病变中存在rVSV证实了因果关系。
降低rVSV-ZEBOV的剂量改善了其早期耐受性,但降低了抗体反应,且未能预防疫苗诱导的关节炎、皮炎或血管炎。与其疗效一样,rVSV-ZEBOV在非洲目标人群中的安全性需要进一步明确。
通过世界卫生组织获得惠康信托基金资助。