South African Tuberculosis Vaccine Initiative (SATVI), Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine, and Division of Immunology, Department of Pathology, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Infectious Disease Research Institute, Seattle, WA, USA.
Lancet Respir Med. 2018 Apr;6(4):287-298. doi: 10.1016/S2213-2600(18)30077-8.
BACKGROUND: A vaccine that prevents pulmonary tuberculosis in adults is needed to halt transmission in endemic regions. This trial aimed to assess the safety and immunogenicity of three administrations at varying doses of antigen and adjuvant of an investigational vaccine (ID93 + GLA-SE) compared with placebo in previously BCG-vaccinated healthy adults in a tuberculosis endemic country. METHODS: In this randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 1 trial, we enrolled HIV-negative, previously BCG-vaccinated adults (aged 18-50 years), with no evidence of previous or current tuberculosis disease, from among community volunteers in the Worcester region of Western Cape, South Africa. Participants were randomly assigned to receive varying doses of ID93 + GLA-SE or saline placebo at day 0, day 28, and day 112. Enrolment into each cohort was sequential. Cohort 1 participants were Mycobacterium tuberculosis uninfected (as defined by negative QuantiFERON [QFT] status), and received 10 μg ID93 plus 2 μg GLA-SE, or placebo; in cohorts 2-4, QFT-negative or positive participants received escalating doses of vaccine or placebo. Cohort 2 received 2 μg ID93 plus 2 μg GLA-SE; cohort 3 received 10 μg ID93 plus 2 μg GLA-SE; and cohort 4 received 10 μg ID93 plus 5 μg GLA-SE. Dose cohort allocation was sequential; randomisation within a cohort was according to a randomly-generated sequence (3 to 1 in cohort 1, 5 to 1 in cohorts 2-4). The primary endpoint was safety of ID93 + GLA-SE as defined by solicited and unsolicited adverse events up to 28 days after each study injection and serious adverse events for the duration of the study. Specific immune responses were measured by intracellular cytokine staining, flow cytometry, and ELISA. All analyses were done according to intention to treat, with additional per-protocol analyses for immunogenicity outcomes. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01927159. FINDINGS: Between Aug 30, 2013, and Sept 4, 2014, 227 individuals consented to participate; 213 were screened (three participants were not included as study number was already met and 11 withdrew consent before screening occurred, mostly due to relocation or demands of employment). 66 healthy, HIV-negative adults were randomly allocated to receive the vaccine (n=54) or placebo (n=12). All study participants received day 0 and day 28 study injections; five participants did not receive an injection on day 112. ID93 + GLA-SE was well tolerated; no severe or serious vaccine-related adverse events were recorded. Vaccine dose did not affect frequency or severity of adverse events, but mild injection site adverse events and flu-like symptoms were common in M tuberculosis-infected participants compared with uninfected participants. Vaccination induced durable antigen-specific IgG and Th1 cellular responses, which peaked after two administrations. Vaccine dose did not affect magnitude, kinetics, or profile of antibody and cellular responses. Earlier boosting and greater T-cell differentiation and effector-like profiles were seen in M tuberculosis-infected than in uninfected vaccinees. INTERPRETATION: Escalating doses of ID93 + GLA-SE induced similar antigen-specific CD4-positive T cell and humoral responses, with an acceptable safety profile in BCG-immunised, M tuberculosis-infected individuals. The T-cell differentiation profiles in M tuberculosis-infected vaccinees suggest priming through natural infection. While cohort sample sizes in this phase 1 trial were small and results should be interpreted in context, these data support efficacy testing of two administrations of the lowest (2 μg) ID93 vaccine dose in tuberculosis endemic populations. FUNDING: Aeras and the Paul G Allen Family Foundation.
背景:需要一种预防成人肺结核的疫苗来阻断流行地区的传播。本试验旨在评估一种研究性疫苗(ID93+GLA-SE)在南非西开普省伍斯特地区以前接受过卡介苗接种的健康成年人中的安全性和免疫原性,这些参与者以前接受过 BCG 疫苗接种,处于肺结核流行地区。
方法:在这项随机、双盲、安慰剂对照的 1 期试验中,我们招募了来自南非西开普省伍斯特地区社区志愿者中的 HIV 阴性、以前接受过 BCG 接种的成年人(年龄 18-50 岁),他们没有证据表明以前或现在患有结核病。参与者随机分配接受不同剂量的 ID93+GLA-SE 或盐水安慰剂,在第 0、28 和 112 天给药。每个队列的入组都是连续的。队列 1 的参与者是未感染结核分枝杆菌的(定义为 QFT 阴性),并接受 10 μg ID93 加 2 μg GLA-SE 或安慰剂;在队列 2-4 中,QFT 阴性或阳性的参与者接受递增剂量的疫苗或安慰剂。队列 2 接受 2 μg ID93 加 2 μg GLA-SE;队列 3 接受 10 μg ID93 加 2 μg GLA-SE;队列 4 接受 10 μg ID93 加 5 μg GLA-SE。剂量队列分配是连续的;同一队列内的随机化是根据随机生成的序列(队列 1 中为 3 比 1,队列 2-4 中为 5 比 1)进行的。主要终点是 ID93+GLA-SE 的安全性,定义为每次研究注射后 28 天内出现的不良事件和研究期间出现的严重不良事件。特异性免疫反应通过细胞内细胞因子染色、流式细胞术和 ELISA 进行测量。所有分析均按意向治疗进行,免疫原性结果进行了额外的方案分析。该试验在 ClinicalTrials.gov 上注册,编号为 NCT01927159。
结果:2013 年 8 月 30 日至 2014 年 9 月 4 日,共有 227 人同意参加;213 人接受了筛选(由于研究人数已经达到,有 3 名参与者未被包括在内,有 11 人在筛选前撤回了同意,主要是由于搬迁或工作要求)。66 名健康、HIV 阴性的成年人被随机分配接受疫苗(n=54)或安慰剂(n=12)。所有研究参与者均接受了第 0 和第 28 天的研究注射;有 5 名参与者在第 112 天没有接受注射。ID93+GLA-SE 耐受性良好;没有记录到严重或严重的疫苗相关不良事件。疫苗剂量不影响不良事件的频率或严重程度,但与未感染者相比,结核分枝杆菌感染者中轻度注射部位不良事件和流感样症状更为常见。接种疫苗可诱导持久的抗原特异性 IgG 和 Th1 细胞反应,在两次给药后达到峰值。疫苗剂量不影响抗体和细胞反应的幅度、动力学或特征。与未感染者相比,结核分枝杆菌感染者中更早的增强和更大的 T 细胞分化和效应样特征更明显。
解释:递增剂量的 ID93+GLA-SE 可诱导类似的 CD4+T 细胞和体液免疫反应,在以前接受过卡介苗接种、结核分枝杆菌感染的个体中具有可接受的安全性。结核分枝杆菌感染者的 T 细胞分化特征表明通过自然感染进行了初步免疫。虽然这项 1 期试验的队列样本量较小,结果应在背景下进行解释,但这些数据支持在肺结核流行地区对两种剂量(2 μg)最低 ID93 疫苗剂量进行疗效测试。
资金:Aeras 和 Paul G Allen 家族基金会。
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