Correlations between three ELISA protocols measurements of RTS,S/AS01-induced anti-CSP IgG antibodies

Author:

Mugo Robert M.ORCID,Orindi BenedictORCID,Shee Faiz M.,Bellamy Duncan,Mwacharo Jedidah,Ewer Katie J.,Bejon Philip,Ndungu Francis M.

Abstract

Background RTS,S/AS01 induced anti-circumsporozoite protein (CSP) IgG antibodies are associated with the vaccine efficacy. There is currently no international standardisation of the assays used in the measurement of anti-CSP IgG antibody concentrations for use in evaluations of the vaccine’s immunogenicity and/or efficacy. Here, we compared the levels of RTS,S/AS01 induced anti-CSP IgG antibodies measured using three different enzyme-Linked ImmunoSorbent Assays (ELISA). Methods 196 plasma samples were randomly selected from the 447 samples collected during the RTS,S/AS01 phase IIb trial in 2007 from Kenyan children aged between 5–17 months. The vaccine-induced anti-CSP IgG antibodies were then measured using two independently developed ELISA protocols (‘Kilifi-RTS,S’ and ‘Oxford-R21’) and compared to the results from the reference ‘Ghent-RTS,S’ protocol for the same participants. For each pair of protocols, a deming regression model was fitted. Linear equations were then derived to aid in conversions into equivalent ELISA units. The agreement was assessed using Bland and Altman method. Findings The anti-CSP IgG antibodies measured from the three ELISA protocols were in agreement, and were positively and linearly correlated; ‘Oxford’ and ‘Kilifi’ r = 0.93 (95% CI 0.91–0.95), ‘Oxford’ and ‘Ghent’ r = 0.94 (95% CI: 0.92–0.96), and ‘Kilifi’ and ‘Ghent’ r = 0.97 (95% CI: 0.96–0.98), p<0.0001 for all correlations. Conclusions With the linearity, agreement and correlations established between the assays, conversion equations can be applied to convert results into equivalent units, enabling comparisons of immunogenicities across different vaccines of the same CSP antigens. This study highlights the need for the international harmonisation of anti-CSP antibody measurements.

Funder

MRC/UKAID

EDCTP

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference31 articles.

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4. Efficacy and safety of the RTS, S/AS01 malaria vaccine during 18 months after vaccination: a phase 3 randomized, controlled trial in children and young infants at 11 African sites;RTS,S Clinical Trials Partnership;PLoS Med,2014

5. Efficacy of a low-dose candidate malaria vaccine, R21 in adjuvant Matrix-M, with seasonal administration to children in Burkina Faso: a randomised controlled trial;MS Datoo;The Lancet,2021

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