1. Immunogenicity of a single dose of tetravalent meningococcal serogroups A, C, W-135, and Y conjugate vaccine administered to 2- to 10-year-olds is noninferior to a licensed-ACWY polysaccharide vaccine with an acceptable safety profile.
- Author
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Memish ZA, Dbaibo G, Montellano M, Verghese VP, Jain H, Dubey AP, Bianco V, Van der Wielen M, Gatchalian S, and Miller JM
- Subjects
- Blood Bactericidal Activity, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, India, Lebanon, Male, Meningococcal Vaccines administration & dosage, Meningococcal Vaccines adverse effects, Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Tetanus Toxoid administration & dosage, Vaccination methods, Vaccines, Conjugate administration & dosage, Vaccines, Conjugate adverse effects, Vaccines, Conjugate immunology, Meningococcal Vaccines immunology
- Abstract
Background: Meningococcal disease remains an important cause of invasive bacterial infections in children less than 5 years of age. Immunogenicity and safety of the investigational ACWY vaccine conjugated with tetanus toxoid (ACWY-TT, GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals) were evaluated in 1501 healthy 2- to 10-year-old children in the Philippines, India, Lebanon, and Saudi Arabia., Methods: Children were randomized (3:1) to receive ACWY-TT or licensed tetravalent meningococcal polysaccharide vaccine (Mencevax, GlaxoSmithKline, Men-PS). Diary cards were used to collect solicited symptoms for 4 days after vaccination. Serious adverse events were reported for 6 months. Serum bactericidal activity (rSBA, rabbit complement) was measured before and 1 month after vaccination in the first 75% of subjects enrolled in each country., Results: The statistical criteria for noninferiority in terms of rSBA vaccine responses were reached. Exploratory analyses showed that postvaccination rSBA titers ≥ 1:8 and ≥ 1:128 were significantly higher after ACWY-TT than Men-PS for serogroups C, W-135, and Y, and rSBA vaccine responses and geometric mean antibody titers were significantly higher for all 4 serogroups after administration of ACWY-TT. Noninferiority in terms of incidences of grade 3 general symptoms was not demonstrated. ACWY-TT was well tolerated with grade 3 events reported in <1% of subjects per group. No serious adverse events were considered related to vaccination., Conclusion: ACWY-TT was immunogenic in children between 2 to 10 years of age with a clinically acceptable safety profile that resembled licensed Men-PS. These data support a positive benefit/risk ratio for the ACWY-TT vaccine.
- Published
- 2011
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