Affiliation:
1. Vaccine Institute St. George's University of London & St George's University Hospital NHS Trust London UK
2. United Kingdom Health Security Agency Colindale UK
3. United Kingdom Health Security Agency Vaccine Evaluation Unit Manchester UK
4. Centre for Neonatal and Paediatric Infection St. George's University of London London UK
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundPeople living with HIV have been shown to have an increased risk of invasive meningococcal disease. In some countries, meningococcal vaccines are now routinely recommended to all people living with HIV, but no study has yet assessed the immunogenicity and safety of a meningococcal serogroup B vaccine or the co‐administration of a MenB and MenACWY vaccine in people living with HIV.MethodsThis phase IV open‐label clinical trial investigated the immunogenicity and safety of two doses of a four‐component recombinant protein‐based MenB vaccine (4CMenB) and a quadrivalent conjugate polysaccharide MenACWY vaccine (MenACWY‐CRM197) given 1 month apart in a population of people living with HIV. Immunogenicity analysis was performed before vaccination and 1 month after the second doses of 4CMenB and MenACWY. Primary outcome measures were serum bactericidal assay geometric mean titres against three MenB reference strains at baseline and 1 month post vaccination, the proportion of participants achieving a putative protective titre of ≥4, and the proportion of participants with a ≥4‐fold rise in titre from baseline. Secondary outcome measures were serum bactericidal assay geometric mean titres against MenA, C, W, and Y reference strains at baseline and 1 month post vaccination, the proportion achieving a putative protective titre of ≥8, and the proportion with a ≥4‐fold rise in titre from baseline. Safety outcomes were solicited and unsolicited adverse events in the 7 days following vaccination. The trial was registered with clinicaltrials.gov (NCT03682939).FindingsIn total, 55 participants aged 20–45 years were enrolled. All participants (100%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 93–100) achieved putative protective titres for two of the three MenB strains and for MenA, W, and Y. A total of 98% (95% CI 89–100) achieved a protective titre for the third MenB strain and 94% (95% CI 83–99) for MenC. No serious adverse events were reported.Interpretation4CMenB and MenACWY were immunogenic and well‐tolerated in a population of people living with HIV 1 month after two doses.
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Health Policy
Cited by
4 articles.
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