Green Luke R, Eiden Joseph, Hao Li, Jones Tom, Perez John, McNeil Lisa K, Jansen Kathrin U, Anderson Annaliesa S
Pfizer Vaccine Research and Development Unit, 401 North Middletown Road, Pearl River, NY, USA.
Methods Mol Biol. 2016;1403:445-69. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4939-3387-7_25.
In this chapter, we describe a research and development pathway to identify and demonstrate the efficacy of a Neisseria meningitidis non-capsular vaccine, the recently licensed N. meningitidis serogroup B (MnB) vaccine, Trumenba(®). While other approaches have been followed in the identification of a MnB vaccine (Pizza et al. Science 287:1816-1820, 2000), the methods described here reflect the distinctive approach and experiences in discovering and developing Trumenba(®). In contrast to the development and licensure of polysaccharide-conjugate vaccines against meningococcal serotypes A, C, W, and Y, the development of a vaccine to produce broadly protective antibodies against meningococcal serogroup B has proved difficult, due to the antigenic mimicry of the serogroup B polysaccharide capsule, which is composed of polysialic acid structures similar to those expressed on human neuronal cells. Early development efforts for these vaccines failed because the MnB polysaccharide structures resemble autoantigens and thus were poorly immunogenic. The development of an MnB vaccine has therefore focused on non-polysaccharide approaches. It was critical to identify MnB cell surface-exposed antigens capable of inducing a protective response against diverse, circulating strains of invasive MnB to ensure global coverage. Once candidate antigens were identified, it was important to characterize antigenic variation and expression levels, and subsequently to assure that antigens were expressed broadly among diverse clinical isolates. Prior to the initiation of clinical trials in humans, candidate vaccine antigens were tested in functional immunogenicity assays and yielded responses that were correlated with protection from meningococcal disease. These functional immunogenicity assays (serum bactericidal assays using human complement, hSBAs) measure the titer of complement-dependent bactericidal antibodies in serum from immunized test animals using diverse clinical MnB isolates as targets. Following optimization of vaccine antigenic components based on hSBA responses in preclinical models, animal toxicology tests were performed. Initial clinical studies (Phase 1 and 2) subsequently provided data to support (1) safety and immunogenicity of the vaccine formulation, and (2) the dose and schedule. Phase 3 clinical trials were carried out in the target populations to provide the clinical confirmation of safety and efficacy required for vaccine licensure.
在本章中,我们描述了一条研发途径,以鉴定并证明一种脑膜炎奈瑟菌非荚膜疫苗(即最近获批的B群脑膜炎奈瑟菌(MnB)疫苗Trumenba(®))的有效性。虽然在鉴定MnB疫苗时采用了其他方法(Pizza等人,《科学》287:1816 - 1820,2000年),但此处描述的方法反映了发现和开发Trumenba(®)的独特方法和经验。与针对A、C、W和Y血清型脑膜炎球菌的多糖结合疫苗的研发和获批不同,开发一种能产生针对B群脑膜炎球菌的广泛保护性抗体的疫苗已被证明很困难,这是因为B群多糖荚膜存在抗原模拟现象,其由与人类神经细胞上表达的结构相似的多唾液酸结构组成。这些疫苗的早期研发努力失败了,因为MnB多糖结构类似于自身抗原,因此免疫原性很差。因此,MnB疫苗的研发重点放在了非多糖方法上。关键是要鉴定出能够诱导针对多种侵袭性MnB流行菌株产生保护性反应的MnB细胞表面暴露抗原,以确保全球覆盖。一旦鉴定出候选抗原,表征抗原变异和表达水平,随后确保抗原在不同临床分离株中广泛表达就很重要。在启动人体临床试验之前,候选疫苗抗原在功能性免疫原性试验中进行了测试,并产生了与预防脑膜炎球菌病相关的反应。这些功能性免疫原性试验(使用人补体的血清杀菌试验,hSBA)以不同的临床MnB分离株为靶标,测量免疫试验动物血清中补体依赖性杀菌抗体的滴度。在基于临床前模型中hSBA反应优化疫苗抗原成分后,进行了动物毒理学试验。随后的初步临床研究(1期和2期)提供了数据以支持:(1)疫苗制剂的安全性和免疫原性,以及(2)剂量和接种程序。在目标人群中开展了3期临床试验,以提供疫苗获批所需的安全性和有效性的临床确认。