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97. Tetravalent Dengue Vaccine (TAK-003) Development Program: A Bird’s Eye View

BACKGROUND: Dengue fever is a mosquito-borne viral disease endemic in 128 countries. An unmet clinical need remains for an effective vaccine that can be used more broadly than the vaccine presently available. A clinical development program has evaluated the long-term safety, immunogenicity, and vacc...

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Autores principales: Tricou, Vianney, Biswal, Shibadas, Liu, Mengya, Patel, Sanjay S, Zent, Olaf, Rauscher, Martina, Perez, Gonzalo, Kandeil, Walid, Folschweiller, Nicolas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8644839/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofab466.097
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author Tricou, Vianney
Biswal, Shibadas
Liu, Mengya
Patel, Sanjay S
Zent, Olaf
Rauscher, Martina
Perez, Gonzalo
Kandeil, Walid
Folschweiller, Nicolas
author_facet Tricou, Vianney
Biswal, Shibadas
Liu, Mengya
Patel, Sanjay S
Zent, Olaf
Rauscher, Martina
Perez, Gonzalo
Kandeil, Walid
Folschweiller, Nicolas
author_sort Tricou, Vianney
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Dengue fever is a mosquito-borne viral disease endemic in 128 countries. An unmet clinical need remains for an effective vaccine that can be used more broadly than the vaccine presently available. A clinical development program has evaluated the long-term safety, immunogenicity, and vaccine efficacy (VE) of TAK-003, a live attenuated tetravalent dengue vaccine with a DENV-2 backbone engineered to elicit immune responses to all 4 dengue serotypes. METHODS: 18 clinical trials in 13 countries have involved 28,175 seropositive/seronegative participants aged from 1.5-60 years from endemic/non-endemic regions. In the ongoing pivotal phase III study, 4–16-year-old healthy children (N=20,099) were randomized 2:1 to receive two doses of TAK-003 or placebo, 3 months apart for an evaluation of VE and safety over a multi-year period stratified pre-vaccination dengue serostatus. Active surveillance throughout the trial detected symptomatic dengue. The trial will continue up to 4–4.5 years post 2(nd) dose, and for another 25 months after a booster dose. Data up to 3 years after the second vaccination are currently available. RESULTS: Safety and immunogenicity data from Phase I/II studies established the final formulation and dosing schedule. Overall VE in the pivotal phase III study was 80.2% [95% CI: 73.3–85.3] against virologically confirmed dengue (VCD) at 12 months post 2(nd) dose. At 18 months, VE was 66.2% (95% CI: 49.1–77.5) in dengue-naive and 76.1% (95% CI: 68.5–81.9) in dengue pre-exposed participants, with VE of 90.4% (95% CI: 82.6–94.7) and 85.9% (95% CI: 31.9–97.1) for prevention of hospitalized VCD and dengue hemorrhagic fever, respectively. Cumulative VE against VCD from first dose to 3 years post 2(nd) dose was 62.0% (95% CI: 56.6–66.7) and 83.6% (95% CI: 76.8–88.4) in prevention of hospitalized VCD. Some decline in VE was observed over time mainly driven by outpatient dengue. Two doses of TAK-003 3 months apart were well-tolerated with no important safety risks identified up to 3 years after completion of the vaccination schedule. CONCLUSION: TAK-003 is immunogenic against all 4 dengue serotypes and continues to be efficacious, well-tolerated, and with no evidence of disease enhancement in seronegative population up to 3 years post-vaccination. DISCLOSURES: Vianney Tricou, D Phil, Takeda Pharmaceuticals International (Employee) Shibadas Biswal, MD, Takeda Vaccines, Inc (Employee) Sanjay S. Patel, PhD, Takeda Pharmaceuticals International AG (Employee) Olaf Zent, MD, Takeda Pharmaceuticals International AG (Employee) Martina Rauscher, PhD, Takeda Pharmaceuticals International AG (Employee) Gonzalo Perez, MD, Takeda group companies (Employee) Walid Kandeil, MD, Takeda Pharmaceuticals International AG (Employee) Nicolas Folschweiller, PhD, Takeda (Employee)
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spelling pubmed-86448392021-12-06 97. Tetravalent Dengue Vaccine (TAK-003) Development Program: A Bird’s Eye View Tricou, Vianney Biswal, Shibadas Liu, Mengya Patel, Sanjay S Zent, Olaf Rauscher, Martina Perez, Gonzalo Kandeil, Walid Folschweiller, Nicolas Open Forum Infect Dis Oral Abstracts BACKGROUND: Dengue fever is a mosquito-borne viral disease endemic in 128 countries. An unmet clinical need remains for an effective vaccine that can be used more broadly than the vaccine presently available. A clinical development program has evaluated the long-term safety, immunogenicity, and vaccine efficacy (VE) of TAK-003, a live attenuated tetravalent dengue vaccine with a DENV-2 backbone engineered to elicit immune responses to all 4 dengue serotypes. METHODS: 18 clinical trials in 13 countries have involved 28,175 seropositive/seronegative participants aged from 1.5-60 years from endemic/non-endemic regions. In the ongoing pivotal phase III study, 4–16-year-old healthy children (N=20,099) were randomized 2:1 to receive two doses of TAK-003 or placebo, 3 months apart for an evaluation of VE and safety over a multi-year period stratified pre-vaccination dengue serostatus. Active surveillance throughout the trial detected symptomatic dengue. The trial will continue up to 4–4.5 years post 2(nd) dose, and for another 25 months after a booster dose. Data up to 3 years after the second vaccination are currently available. RESULTS: Safety and immunogenicity data from Phase I/II studies established the final formulation and dosing schedule. Overall VE in the pivotal phase III study was 80.2% [95% CI: 73.3–85.3] against virologically confirmed dengue (VCD) at 12 months post 2(nd) dose. At 18 months, VE was 66.2% (95% CI: 49.1–77.5) in dengue-naive and 76.1% (95% CI: 68.5–81.9) in dengue pre-exposed participants, with VE of 90.4% (95% CI: 82.6–94.7) and 85.9% (95% CI: 31.9–97.1) for prevention of hospitalized VCD and dengue hemorrhagic fever, respectively. Cumulative VE against VCD from first dose to 3 years post 2(nd) dose was 62.0% (95% CI: 56.6–66.7) and 83.6% (95% CI: 76.8–88.4) in prevention of hospitalized VCD. Some decline in VE was observed over time mainly driven by outpatient dengue. Two doses of TAK-003 3 months apart were well-tolerated with no important safety risks identified up to 3 years after completion of the vaccination schedule. CONCLUSION: TAK-003 is immunogenic against all 4 dengue serotypes and continues to be efficacious, well-tolerated, and with no evidence of disease enhancement in seronegative population up to 3 years post-vaccination. DISCLOSURES: Vianney Tricou, D Phil, Takeda Pharmaceuticals International (Employee) Shibadas Biswal, MD, Takeda Vaccines, Inc (Employee) Sanjay S. Patel, PhD, Takeda Pharmaceuticals International AG (Employee) Olaf Zent, MD, Takeda Pharmaceuticals International AG (Employee) Martina Rauscher, PhD, Takeda Pharmaceuticals International AG (Employee) Gonzalo Perez, MD, Takeda group companies (Employee) Walid Kandeil, MD, Takeda Pharmaceuticals International AG (Employee) Nicolas Folschweiller, PhD, Takeda (Employee) Oxford University Press 2021-12-04 /pmc/articles/PMC8644839/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofab466.097 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Oral Abstracts
Tricou, Vianney
Biswal, Shibadas
Liu, Mengya
Patel, Sanjay S
Zent, Olaf
Rauscher, Martina
Perez, Gonzalo
Kandeil, Walid
Folschweiller, Nicolas
97. Tetravalent Dengue Vaccine (TAK-003) Development Program: A Bird’s Eye View
title 97. Tetravalent Dengue Vaccine (TAK-003) Development Program: A Bird’s Eye View
title_full 97. Tetravalent Dengue Vaccine (TAK-003) Development Program: A Bird’s Eye View
title_fullStr 97. Tetravalent Dengue Vaccine (TAK-003) Development Program: A Bird’s Eye View
title_full_unstemmed 97. Tetravalent Dengue Vaccine (TAK-003) Development Program: A Bird’s Eye View
title_short 97. Tetravalent Dengue Vaccine (TAK-003) Development Program: A Bird’s Eye View
title_sort 97. tetravalent dengue vaccine (tak-003) development program: a bird’s eye view
topic Oral Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8644839/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofab466.097
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