Tapia Milagritos D, Sow Samba O, Lyke Kirsten E, Haidara Fadima Cheick, Diallo Fatoumata, Doumbia Moussa, Traore Awa, Coulibaly Flanon, Kodio Mamoudou, Onwuchekwa Uma, Sztein Marcelo B, Wahid Rezwanul, Campbell James D, Kieny Marie-Paule, Moorthy Vasee, Imoukhuede Egeruan B, Rampling Tommy, Roman Francois, De Ryck Iris, Bellamy Abbie R, Dally Len, Mbaya Olivier Tshiani, Ploquin Aurélie, Zhou Yan, Stanley Daphne A, Bailer Robert, Koup Richard A, Roederer Mario, Ledgerwood Julie, Hill Adrian V S, Ballou W Ripley, Sullivan Nancy, Graham Barney, Levine Myron M
Center for Vaccine Development, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA; Centre pour le Développement des Vaccins du Mali, Bamako, Mali, West Africa.
Centre pour le Développement des Vaccins du Mali, Bamako, Mali, West Africa.
Lancet Infect Dis. 2016 Jan;16(1):31-42. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(15)00362-X. Epub 2015 Nov 4.
The 2014 west African Zaire Ebola virus epidemic prompted worldwide partners to accelerate clinical development of replication-defective chimpanzee adenovirus 3 vector vaccine expressing Zaire Ebola virus glycoprotein (ChAd3-EBO-Z). We aimed to investigate the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of ChAd3-EBO-Z in Malian and US adults, and assess the effect of boosting of Malians with modified vaccinia Ankara expressing Zaire Ebola virus glycoprotein and other filovirus antigens (MVA-BN-Filo).
In the phase 1, single-blind, randomised trial of ChAd3-EBO-Z in the USA, we recruited adults aged 18-65 years from the University of Maryland medical community and the Baltimore community. In the phase 1b, open-label and double-blind, dose-escalation trial of ChAd3-EBO-Z in Mali, we recruited adults 18-50 years of age from six hospitals and health centres in Bamako (Mali), some of whom were also eligible for a nested, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of MVA-BN-Filo. For randomised segments of the Malian trial and for the US trial, we randomly allocated participants (1:1; block size of six [Malian] or four [US]; ARB produced computer-generated randomisation lists; clinical staff did randomisation) to different single doses of intramuscular immunisation with ChAd3-EBO-Z: Malians received 1 × 10(10) viral particle units (pu), 2·5 × 10(10) pu, 5 × 10(10) pu, or 1 × 10(11) pu; US participants received 1 × 10(10) pu or 1 × 10(11) pu. We randomly allocated Malians in the nested trial (1:1) to receive a single dose of 2 × 10(8) plaque-forming units of MVA-BN-Filo or saline placebo. In the double-blind segments of the Malian trial, investigators, clinical staff, participants, and immunology laboratory staff were masked, but the study pharmacist (MK), vaccine administrator, and study statistician (ARB) were unmasked. In the US trial, investigators were not masked, but participants were. Analyses were per protocol. The primary outcome was safety, measured with occurrence of adverse events for 7 days after vaccination. Both trials are registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, numbers NCT02231866 (US) and NCT02267109 (Malian).
Between Oct 8, 2014, and Feb 16, 2015, we randomly allocated 91 participants in Mali (ten [11%] to 1 × 10(10) pu, 35 [38%] to 2·5 × 10(10) pu, 35 [38%] to 5 × 10(10) pu, and 11 [12%] to 1 × 10(11) pu) and 20 in the USA (ten [50%] to 1 × 10(10) pu and ten [50%] to 1 × 10(11) pu), and boosted 52 Malians with MVA-BN-Filo (27 [52%]) or saline (25 [48%]). We identified no safety concerns with either vaccine: seven (8%) of 91 participants in Mali (five [5%] received 5 × 10(10) and two [2%] received 1 × 10(11) pu) and four (20%) of 20 in the USA (all received 1 × 10(11) pu) given ChAd3-EBO-Z had fever lasting for less than 24 h, and 15 (56%) of 27 Malians boosted with MVA-BN-Filo had injection-site pain or tenderness.
1 × 10(11) pu single-dose ChAd3-EBO-Z could suffice for phase 3 efficacy trials of ring-vaccination containment needing short-term, high-level protection to interrupt transmission. MVA-BN-Filo boosting, although a complex regimen, could confer long-lived protection if needed (eg, for health-care workers).
Wellcome Trust, Medical Research Council UK, Department for International Development UK, National Cancer Institute, Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research, Federal Funds from National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
2014年西非扎伊尔埃博拉病毒疫情促使全球合作伙伴加速研发表达扎伊尔埃博拉病毒糖蛋白的复制缺陷型黑猩猩腺病毒3载体疫苗(ChAd3-EBO-Z)。我们旨在研究ChAd3-EBO-Z在马里和美国成年人中的安全性、耐受性和免疫原性,并评估用表达扎伊尔埃博拉病毒糖蛋白及其他丝状病毒抗原的改良安卡拉痘苗病毒(MVA-BN-Filo)对马里人进行加强免疫的效果。
在美国进行的ChAd3-EBO-Z 1期单盲随机试验中,我们从马里兰大学医学社区和巴尔的摩社区招募了18-65岁的成年人。在马里进行的ChAd3-EBO-Z 1b期开放标签和双盲剂量递增试验中,我们从巴马科(马里)的六家医院和健康中心招募了18-50岁的成年人,其中一些人也符合MVA-BN-Filo的嵌套随机双盲安慰剂对照试验的条件。对于马里试验和美国试验的随机分组部分,我们将参与者(1:1;马里的分组块大小为6,美国为4;ARB生成计算机随机化列表;临床工作人员进行随机分组)随机分配至不同单剂量的ChAd3-EBO-Z肌肉注射:马里人接受1×10¹⁰病毒颗粒单位(pu)、2.5×10¹⁰ pu、5×10¹⁰ pu或1×10¹¹ pu;美国参与者接受1×10¹⁰ pu或1×¹⁰¹¹ pu。我们将嵌套试验中的马里人(1:1)随机分配至接受单剂量2×10⁸蚀斑形成单位的MVA-BN-Filo或生理盐水安慰剂。在马里试验的双盲部分,研究者、临床工作人员、参与者和免疫实验室工作人员均处于盲态,但研究药剂师(MK)、疫苗接种者和研究统计学家(ARB)未设盲。在美国试验中,研究者未设盲,但参与者设盲。分析按照方案进行。主要结局为安全性,通过接种疫苗后7天内不良事件的发生情况来衡量。两项试验均已在ClinicalTrials.gov注册,编号分别为NCT02231866(美国)和NCT02267109(马里)。
在2014年10月8日至2015年2月16日期间,我们将91名马里参与者(1×10¹⁰ pu组10人[11%]、2.5×10¹⁰ pu组35人[38%]、5×10¹⁰ pu组35人[38%]、1×10¹¹ pu组11人[12%])和20名美国参与者(1×10¹⁰ pu组10人[50%]、1×10¹¹ pu组10人[50%])进行了随机分组,并对其中52名马里人用MVA-BN-Filo(27人[52%])或生理盐水(25人[48%])进行了加强免疫。我们未发现两种疫苗存在安全性问题:在接受ChAd3-EBO-Z的91名马里参与者中,7人(8%)(5×10¹⁰ pu组5人[5%]、1×10¹¹ pu组2人[2%])出现持续不到24小时发热,在美国接受ChAd3-EBO-Z的20名参与者中,4人(20%)(均接受1×10¹¹ pu)出现发热,在接受MVA-BN-Filo加强免疫的27名马里人中,15人(56%)出现注射部位疼痛或压痛。
单剂量1×10¹¹ pu的ChAd3-EBO-Z可能足以用于需要短期高水平保护以中断传播的环接种控制的3期疗效试验。MVA-BN-Filo加强免疫虽然是一种复杂的方案,但如有需要(如对医护人员)可提供长期保护。
惠康信托基金会、英国医学研究理事会、英国国际发展部、美国国立癌症研究所、弗雷德里克国家癌症研究实验室、美国国立过敏和传染病研究所提供的联邦资金。