Penny Melissa A, Pemberton-Ross Peter, Smith Thomas A
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, 4051, Basel, Switzerland.
University of Basel, Petersplatz 1, Basel, Switzerland.
Malar J. 2015 Nov 4;14:437. doi: 10.1186/s12936-015-0969-8.
Recent publications have reported follow-up of the RTS,S/AS01 malaria vaccine candidate Phase III trials at 11 African sites for 32 months (or longer). This includes site- and time-specific estimates of incidence and efficacy against clinical disease with four different vaccination schedules. These data allow estimation of the time-course of protection against infection associated with two different ages of vaccination, both with and without a booster dose.
Using an ensemble of individual-based stochastic models, each trial cohort in the Phase III trial was simulated assuming many different hypothetical profiles for the vaccine efficacy against infection in time, for both the primary course and boosting dose and including the potential for either exponential or non-exponential decay. The underlying profile of protection was determined by Bayesian fitting of these model predictions to the site- and time-specific incidence of clinical malaria over 32 months (or longer) of follow-up. Using the same stochastic models, projections of clinical efficacy in each of the sites were modelled and compared to available observed trial data.
The initial protection of RTS,S immediately following three doses is estimated as providing an efficacy against infection of 65 % (when immunizing infants aged 6-12 weeks old) and 91 % (immunizing children aged 5-17 months old at first vaccination). This protection decays relatively rapidly, with an approximately exponential decay for the 6-12 weeks old cohort (with a half-life of 7.2 months); for the 5-17 months old cohort a biphasic decay with a similar half-life is predicted, with an initial rapid decay followed by a slower decay. The boosting dose was estimated to return protection to an efficacy against infection of 50-55 % for both cohorts. Estimates of clinical efficacy by trial site are consistent with those reported in the trial for all cohorts.
The site- and time-specific clinical observations from the RTS,S/AS01 trial data allowed a reasonably precise estimation of the underlying vaccine protection against infection which is consistent with common underlying efficacy and decay rates across the trial sites. This calibration suggests that the decay in efficacy against clinical disease is more rapid than that against infection because of age-shifts in the incidence of disease. The dynamical models predict that clinical effectiveness will continue to decay and that likely effects beyond the time-scale of the trial will be small.
最近的出版物报道了在11个非洲地点对RTS,S/AS01疟疾候选疫苗进行的III期试验长达32个月(或更长时间)的随访情况。这包括针对四种不同疫苗接种方案的临床疾病发病率和疗效的特定地点和时间估计。这些数据有助于估计与两种不同接种年龄相关的抗感染保护的时间进程,包括有无加强剂量的情况。
使用基于个体的随机模型集合,对III期试验中的每个试验队列进行模拟,假设针对初次接种和加强剂量的疫苗抗感染效力在时间上有许多不同的假设情况,包括指数衰减或非指数衰减的可能性。通过将这些模型预测结果与32个月(或更长时间)随访期间特定地点和时间的临床疟疾发病率进行贝叶斯拟合,确定了潜在的保护情况。使用相同的随机模型,对每个地点的临床疗效进行建模预测,并与现有的观察到的试验数据进行比较。
估计在接种三剂疫苗后,RTS,S的初始保护作用提供了65%的抗感染效力(针对6 - 12周龄婴儿进行免疫接种时)和91%的抗感染效力(首次接种时针对5 - 17月龄儿童进行免疫接种)。这种保护作用衰减相对较快,对于6 - 12周龄队列呈现近似指数衰减(半衰期为7.2个月);对于5 - 17月龄队列,预测为双相衰减,半衰期相似,初始快速衰减后接着较慢衰减。估计加强剂量可使两个队列的抗感染效力恢复到50 - 55%。各试验地点的临床疗效估计与所有队列试验中报告的结果一致。
来自RTS,S/AS01试验数据的特定地点和时间的临床观察结果,使得能够合理精确地估计潜在的疫苗抗感染保护情况,这与各试验地点普遍的潜在效力和衰减率一致。这种校准表明,由于疾病发病率的年龄变化,针对临床疾病的效力衰减比对感染的效力衰减更快。动态模型预测临床有效性将继续衰减,并且在试验时间尺度之外可能产生的影响较小。