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含AS03佐剂的单价(D614)SARS-CoV-2重组蛋白疫苗在成人中的疗效:一项3期多国研究。

Efficacy of a monovalent (D614) SARS-CoV-2 recombinant protein vaccine with AS03 adjuvant in adults: a phase 3, multi-country study.

作者信息

Dayan Gustavo H, Rouphael Nadine, Walsh Stephen R, Chen Aiying, Grunenberg Nicole, Allen Mary, Antony Johannes, Bhate Amit Suresh, Beresnev Tatiana, Bonaparte Matthew I, Celle Médéric, Ceregido Maria Angeles, Corey Lawrence, Fu Bo, Grillet Marie-Helene, Keshtkar-Jahromi Maryam, Juraska Michal, Kee Jia Jin, Kaali Seyram, Koutsoukos Marguerite, Masotti Roger, Michael Nelson L, Neuzil Kathleen M, Reynales Humberto, Robb Merlin L, Uchiyama Akiyoshi, Sawe Fredrick, Schuerman Lode, Shrestha Rajeev, Tong Tina, Treanor John, Diazgranados Carlos A, Chicz Roman M, Gurunathan Sanjay, Savarino Stephen, Sridhar Saranya

机构信息

Sanofi, Swiftwater, PA, USA.

Hope Clinic, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.

出版信息

EClinicalMedicine. 2023 Sep 12;64:102168. doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102168. eCollection 2023 Oct.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The literature on first generation COVID-19 vaccines show they were less effective against new SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern including Omicron (BA.1, BA.2, BA.4 and BA.5 subvariants). New vaccines developed against variant strains may provide cross-protection against emerging variants when used as boosters and facilitate vaccination across a range of countries, healthcare settings and populations. However, there are no data on such vaccines when used as a primary series.

METHODS

A global Phase 3, multi-stage efficacy study (NCT04904549) among adults (≥18 years) was conducted in 53 research centres in eight countries (United States, Honduras, Japan, Colombia, Kenya, India, Ghana, Nepal). Participants were randomized 1:1 to receive two intramuscular injections of a monovalent SARS-CoV-2 recombinant protein vaccine with AS03-adjuvant (10 μg of the spike (S) protein from the ancestral D614 strain) or placebo on Day 1 (D01) and Day 22 (D22). The primary efficacy endpoint was prevention of virologically confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection with symptoms of COVID-19-like illness (CLI) ≥14 days after the second injection (post-dose 2 [PD2]) in participants who were SARS-CoV-2 naïve on D01 + D22. Safety and reactogenicity were also evaluated.

FINDINGS

Between May 26 and November 7, 2021, 10,114 participants received ≥1 study injection, and 9441 participants received both injections. 2108 (20.8%) participants were SARS-CoV-2 naïve at D01 and D22. The primary endpoint was analysed in a subset of the full analysis set (the modified full analysis set PD2 [mFAS-PD2], excluding participants who did not complete the vaccination schedule or received vaccination despite meeting one of the contraindication criteria, had onset of symptomatic COVID-19 between the first injection and before 14 days after the second injection, or participants who discontinued before 14 days after the second injection [n = 9377; vaccine, n = 4702; placebo, n = 4675]). Data were available for 2051 SARS-CoV-2 naïve and 7159 non-naïve participants. At the cut-off date (January 28, 2022), symptomatic COVID-19 was reported in 169 naïve participants (vaccine, n = 81; placebo, n = 88) ≥14 days PD2, with a vaccine efficacy (VE) of 15.3% (95% CI, -15.8; 38.2). VE regardless of D01/D22 serostatus was 32.9% (95% CI, 15.3; 47.0) and VE in non-naïve participants was 52.7% (95% CI, 31.2; 67.9). Viral genome sequencing was performed up to the data cut-off point and identified the infecting strain in 99/169 adjudicated cases in the PD2 naïve population (Delta [25], Omicron [72], other variants [3], one participant had infection with both Delta and Omicron variants and has been included in the totals for both Delta and Omicron). The vaccine was well-tolerated with an acceptable safety profile.

INTERPRETATION

In the context of changing circulating viral variants, it is challenging to induce protection in naïve individuals with a two-dose priming schedule based on the parental D614 strain. However, while the primary endpoint of this trial was not met, the results show that a monovalent D614 vaccine can still be of value in individuals previously exposed to SARS-CoV-2.

FUNDING

This study was funded in whole or in part by Sanofi and by federal funds from the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, part of the office of the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under contract number HHSO100201600005I, and in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Defense Joint Program Executive Office for Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Defense under contract number W15QKN-16-9-1002. The views presented here are those of the authors and do not purport to represent those of the Department of the Army, the Department of Health and Human Services, or the U.S. government.

摘要

背景

关于第一代新冠疫苗的文献表明,它们对包括奥密克戎(BA.1、BA.2、BA.4和BA.5亚变体)在内的新出现的值得关注的严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)变体的效力较低。针对变异株研发的新型疫苗在用作加强针时可能会对新出现的变体提供交叉保护,并有助于在一系列国家、医疗机构和人群中进行疫苗接种。然而,尚无关于此类疫苗用作初始系列疫苗的数据。

方法

在八个国家(美国、洪都拉斯、日本、哥伦比亚、肯尼亚、印度、加纳、尼泊尔)的53个研究中心对成年人(≥18岁)开展了一项全球3期多阶段疗效研究(NCT04904549)。参与者按1:1随机分组,在第1天(D01)和第22天(D22)接受两次肌肉注射含AS03佐剂的单价SARS-CoV-2重组蛋白疫苗(来自原始D614毒株的10μg刺突(S)蛋白)或安慰剂。主要疗效终点是在D01 + D22时未感染SARS-CoV-2的参与者中,预防在第二次注射(第2剂后[PD2])≥14天后出现病毒学确诊的伴有新冠样疾病(CLI)症状的SARS-CoV-2感染。还评估了安全性和反应原性。

结果

2021年5月26日至11月7日期间,10114名参与者接受了≥1次研究注射,9441名参与者接受了两次注射。2108名(20.8%)参与者在D01和D22时未感染SARS-CoV-2。在全分析集的一个子集中分析了主要终点(改良全分析集PD2 [mFAS-PD2],排除未完成疫苗接种计划或尽管符合一项禁忌标准仍接受疫苗接种、在第一次注射和第二次注射后14天之前出现有症状新冠、或在第二次注射后14天之前停药的参与者[n = 9377;疫苗组,n = 4702;安慰剂组,n = 4675])。有2051名未感染SARS-CoV-2的参与者和7159名已感染的参与者的数据。在截止日期(2022年1月28日),169名未感染的参与者(疫苗组,n = 81;安慰剂组,n = 88)在PD2≥14天后报告了有症状的新冠,疫苗效力(VE)为15.3%(95%置信区间,-15.8;38.2)。无论D01/D22血清学状态如何,VE为32.9%(95%置信区间,15.3;47.0),在已感染的参与者中VE为52.7%(95%置信区间,31.2;67.9)。在数据截止点之前进行了病毒基因组测序,并在PD2未感染人群的99/169例判定病例中鉴定出感染毒株(德尔塔[25]、奥密克戎[72]、其他变体[3],一名参与者同时感染了德尔塔和奥密克戎变体,已计入德尔塔和奥密克戎的总数)。该疫苗耐受性良好,安全性可接受。

解读

在循环病毒变体不断变化的情况下,基于原始D614毒株的两剂初始接种方案在未感染个体中诱导保护具有挑战性。然而,尽管该试验未达到主要终点,但结果表明单价D614疫苗对先前接触过SARS-CoV-2的个体仍可能有价值。

资助

本研究全部或部分由赛诺菲以及美国卫生与公众服务部战略准备和应对管理办公室下属生物医学高级研究与发展局的联邦资金资助,合同编号HHSO100201600005I,并与美国国防部化学、生物、放射和核防御联合项目执行办公室合作,合同编号W15QKN-16-9-1002。此处呈现的观点为作者观点,并不代表陆军部、卫生与公众服务部或美国政府的观点。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/8c34/10626161/504569308da2/gr1.jpg

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