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Safety and Immunogenicity of a Novel Intranasal Influenza Vaccine (NasoVAX): A Phase 2 Randomized, Controlled Trial

Annual influenza vaccination greatly reduces morbidity and mortality, but effectiveness remains sub-optimal. Weaknesses of current vaccines include low effectiveness against mismatched strains, lack of mucosal and other effective tissue-resident immune responses, weak cellular immune responses, and...

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Autores principales: Tasker, Sybil, Wight O’Rourke, Anna, Suyundikov, Anvar, Jackson Booth, Peta-Gay, Bart, Stephan, Krishnan, Vyjayanthi, Zhang, Jianfeng, Anderson, Katie J., Georges, Bertrand, Roberts, M. Scot
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8000446/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33807649
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9030224
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author Tasker, Sybil
Wight O’Rourke, Anna
Suyundikov, Anvar
Jackson Booth, Peta-Gay
Bart, Stephan
Krishnan, Vyjayanthi
Zhang, Jianfeng
Anderson, Katie J.
Georges, Bertrand
Roberts, M. Scot
author_facet Tasker, Sybil
Wight O’Rourke, Anna
Suyundikov, Anvar
Jackson Booth, Peta-Gay
Bart, Stephan
Krishnan, Vyjayanthi
Zhang, Jianfeng
Anderson, Katie J.
Georges, Bertrand
Roberts, M. Scot
author_sort Tasker, Sybil
collection PubMed
description Annual influenza vaccination greatly reduces morbidity and mortality, but effectiveness remains sub-optimal. Weaknesses of current vaccines include low effectiveness against mismatched strains, lack of mucosal and other effective tissue-resident immune responses, weak cellular immune responses, and insufficiently durable immune responses. The safety and immunogenicity of NasoVAX, a monovalent intranasal influenza vaccine based on a replication-deficient adenovirus type 5 platform, were evaluated in a placebo-controlled single ascending-dose study. Sixty healthy adults (18–49 years) received a single intranasal dose of 1×10(9) viral particles (vp), 1 × 10(10) vp, or 1 × 10(11) vp of NasoVAX or placebo. NasoVAX was well-tolerated and elicited robust influenza-specific systemic and mucosal immune responses. The highest NasoVAX dose and the approved Fluzone(®) influenza vaccine elicited comparable hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) geometric mean titers (152.8 vs. 293.4) and microneutralization (MN) geometric mean titers (142.5 vs. 162.8), with NasoVAX HAI titers maintained more than 1-year on average following a single dose. Hemagglutinin-specific T cells responses were also documented in peripheral mononuclear cell (PBMC) preparations. Consistent with the intranasal route of administration, NasoVAX elicited antigen-specific mucosal IgA responses in the nasopharyngeal cavity with an increase of approximately 2-fold over baseline GMT at the mid- and high-doses. In summary, NasoVAX appeared safe and elicited a broad immune response, including humoral, cellular, and mucosal immunity, with no impact of baseline anti-adenovirus antibody at the most immunogenic dose.
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spelling pubmed-80004462021-03-28 Safety and Immunogenicity of a Novel Intranasal Influenza Vaccine (NasoVAX): A Phase 2 Randomized, Controlled Trial Tasker, Sybil Wight O’Rourke, Anna Suyundikov, Anvar Jackson Booth, Peta-Gay Bart, Stephan Krishnan, Vyjayanthi Zhang, Jianfeng Anderson, Katie J. Georges, Bertrand Roberts, M. Scot Vaccines (Basel) Article Annual influenza vaccination greatly reduces morbidity and mortality, but effectiveness remains sub-optimal. Weaknesses of current vaccines include low effectiveness against mismatched strains, lack of mucosal and other effective tissue-resident immune responses, weak cellular immune responses, and insufficiently durable immune responses. The safety and immunogenicity of NasoVAX, a monovalent intranasal influenza vaccine based on a replication-deficient adenovirus type 5 platform, were evaluated in a placebo-controlled single ascending-dose study. Sixty healthy adults (18–49 years) received a single intranasal dose of 1×10(9) viral particles (vp), 1 × 10(10) vp, or 1 × 10(11) vp of NasoVAX or placebo. NasoVAX was well-tolerated and elicited robust influenza-specific systemic and mucosal immune responses. The highest NasoVAX dose and the approved Fluzone(®) influenza vaccine elicited comparable hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) geometric mean titers (152.8 vs. 293.4) and microneutralization (MN) geometric mean titers (142.5 vs. 162.8), with NasoVAX HAI titers maintained more than 1-year on average following a single dose. Hemagglutinin-specific T cells responses were also documented in peripheral mononuclear cell (PBMC) preparations. Consistent with the intranasal route of administration, NasoVAX elicited antigen-specific mucosal IgA responses in the nasopharyngeal cavity with an increase of approximately 2-fold over baseline GMT at the mid- and high-doses. In summary, NasoVAX appeared safe and elicited a broad immune response, including humoral, cellular, and mucosal immunity, with no impact of baseline anti-adenovirus antibody at the most immunogenic dose. MDPI 2021-03-05 /pmc/articles/PMC8000446/ /pubmed/33807649 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9030224 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ).
spellingShingle Article
Tasker, Sybil
Wight O’Rourke, Anna
Suyundikov, Anvar
Jackson Booth, Peta-Gay
Bart, Stephan
Krishnan, Vyjayanthi
Zhang, Jianfeng
Anderson, Katie J.
Georges, Bertrand
Roberts, M. Scot
Safety and Immunogenicity of a Novel Intranasal Influenza Vaccine (NasoVAX): A Phase 2 Randomized, Controlled Trial
title Safety and Immunogenicity of a Novel Intranasal Influenza Vaccine (NasoVAX): A Phase 2 Randomized, Controlled Trial
title_full Safety and Immunogenicity of a Novel Intranasal Influenza Vaccine (NasoVAX): A Phase 2 Randomized, Controlled Trial
title_fullStr Safety and Immunogenicity of a Novel Intranasal Influenza Vaccine (NasoVAX): A Phase 2 Randomized, Controlled Trial
title_full_unstemmed Safety and Immunogenicity of a Novel Intranasal Influenza Vaccine (NasoVAX): A Phase 2 Randomized, Controlled Trial
title_short Safety and Immunogenicity of a Novel Intranasal Influenza Vaccine (NasoVAX): A Phase 2 Randomized, Controlled Trial
title_sort safety and immunogenicity of a novel intranasal influenza vaccine (nasovax): a phase 2 randomized, controlled trial
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8000446/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33807649
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines9030224
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