Persistence of Immunogenicity of a Purified Inactivated Zika Virus Vaccine Candidate in Healthy Adults: 2 Years of Follow-up Compared With Natural Infection

Author:

Acosta Camilo J1,Diaz Clemente2,Nordio Francesco1,Han Htay-Htay1,Moss Kelley J1,Bohning Kelly1,Kumar Pradeep3,Liu Mengya1,Patel Hetal1,Pacciarini Filippo1,Mwangi Vincent1,Walter Elke3,Powell Tim D1,El Sahly Hana M4,Baldwin Whitney R1,Santangelo Joseph1,Anderson Evan J5ORCID,Dubin Gary3

Affiliation:

1. Takeda Vaccines,   Cambridge, Massachusetts , USA

2. Puerto Rico Clinical and Translational Research Consortium , San Juan , Puerto Rico

3. Takeda Pharmaceuticals International , Zürich , Switzerland

4. Baylor College of Medicine , Houston, Texas , USA

5. Emory University School of Medicine , Atlanta , Georgia , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background We report 2-year persistence of immune response to Takeda's prophylactic purified formalin-inactivated whole Zika virus vaccine candidate (TAK-426) compared with that observed after natural infection. Methods A randomized, observer-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-selection, phase 1 trial was conducted in 18–49-year-old adults at 9 centers (7 in the United States, 2 in Puerto Rico) from 13 November 2017 to 24 November 2020. Primary objectives were safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of 3 increasing doses of TAK-426 administered as 2 doses 28 days apart to flavivirus (FV)–naive and FV-primed adults. Here, we report on safety and persistence of immunity up to 2 years after primary vaccination with 10-μg TAK-426, the highest dose, and compare neutralizing antibody responses with those observed after natural infection. Results TAK-426 at 10-μg had an acceptable safety profile in FV-naive and FV-primed adults up to 24 months after dose 2. Seropositivity for neutralizing antibodies was 100% at 1 year, and 93.8% and 76.2% at 2 years in FV-naive and FV-primed groups, respectively. TAK-426 responses were comparable in magnitude and kinetics with those elicited by natural Zika virus infection. Conclusions These results support the further clinical development of TAK-426 for both FV-naive and FV-primed populations. Clinical Trials Registration NCT03343626

Funder

Department of Health and Human Services

Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response

Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology and Allergy

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