Antibody Correlates of Protection From Severe Respiratory Syncytial Virus Disease in a Vaccine Efficacy Trial

Author:

Fong Youyi12,Huang Ying12ORCID,Borate Bhavesh1,van der Laan Lars W P1,Zhang Wenbo1,Carpp Lindsay N1ORCID,Cho Iksung3,Glenn Greg3,Fries Louis3,Gottardo Raphael1,Gilbert Peter B124ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Vaccine and Infectious Disease Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center , Seattle, Washington , USA

2. Division of Public Health Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center , Seattle, Washington , USA

3. Novavax, Inc , Gaithersburg, Maryland , USA

4. Department of Biostatistics, University of Washington , Seattle, Washington , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) can cause serious lung infections in young children and there is currently no available vaccine. Methods We used complementary statistical frameworks to analyze 4 RSV serology measurements in mothers and their infants in South Africa who participated in a phase 3 maternal immunization trial of an RSV F protein nanoparticle vaccine as correlates of risk and of protection against different RSV disease endpoints. Results We found evidence to support each antibody measurement—encompassing RSV-neutralizing antibodies and F surface glycoprotein-binding antibodies—as an inverse correlate of risk of RSV-associated acute lower respiratory tract infection with severe hypoxia in at least 1 framework, with vaccine-induced fold-rise from the maternal enrollment to day 14 samples of anti-F immunoglobulin G (IgG) binding antibodies having the most consistent evidence. This evidence includes a significant association of fold-rise anti-F IgG with vaccine efficacy (VE); achieving a baseline covariate-adjusted VE of 75% requires a vaccine-induced maternal anti-F IgG fold-rise of around 16. Neither multivariable logistic regression nor superlearning analyses showed benefit to including multiple time points or assays in the same model, suggesting a parsimonious correlate. Post hoc exploratory analyses supported adherence of vaccine-induced maternal anti-F IgG fold-rise to the Prentice criteria for a valid surrogate endpoint. Conclusions Our results suggest that the vaccine induced protective anti-F antibody responses. If this finding is confirmed, VE could potentially be augmented by increasing these responses.

Funder

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the NIH

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Oncology

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