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Maternal immunization with Group B <scp> Streptococcus six‐valent </scp> polysaccharide conjugate vaccine supported by lack of toxicity in rat and rabbit fertility and developmental toxicity studies

Authors :
Annaliesa S. Anderson
William S. Nowland
Natasha R. Catlin
Gregg D. Cappon
Scott Engel
Ingrid L. Scully
Christopher J. Bowman
Cynthia M. Rohde
Sandra M. Buitrago
Source :
Birth Defects Research. 113:1343-1356
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

A maternal Group B Streptococcus (GBS) six-valent polysaccharide conjugate vaccine (GBS6) is being developed to protect neonates and infants up to 3 months of age through passive transfer of antibodies from the mother to the infant. Fertility and developmental toxicity studies were conducted in female Sprague Dawley rats and New Zealand White rabbits with GBS6 (20 μg capsular polysaccharide/serotype formulated with or without AlPO4 , the highest clinical dose). Females were administered the full human dose of the GBS6 formulation intramuscularly twice prior to mating and twice during gestation, to ensure that high antibody levels were maintained throughout gestation and lactation. Approximately, half of the rats and rabbits were evaluated at the end of gestation, and the remainder were evaluated at the end of lactation. Maternal blood for GBS6 serology, to measure antibody titers to the GBS6 antigens, was collected prior to the first dose, prior to mating, and at each necropsy. Blood for serology was also collected from offspring at the end of gestation and lactation. In both species, there was no evidence of vaccine-related effects on fertility, embryo-fetal development, or postnatal development of the offspring, supporting regulatory guidance that single-species evaluation would have been sufficient. Functional serum antibodies to all six serotypes in the vaccine were confirmed in maternal animals and functional serum antibodies to one or more of the six serotypes was also confirmed in some rat offspring and most of the rabbit offspring. The results of these studies supported the safety of GBS6 vaccine administration to pregnant women.

Details

ISSN :
24721727
Volume :
113
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Birth Defects Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........88aff61b35ca63e2d5d7ed89a832d473