1. Safety and immunogenicity of a variant-adapted SARS-CoV-2 recombinant protein vaccine with AS03 adjuvant as a booster in adults primed with authorized vaccines: a phase 3, parallel-group study.
- Author
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de Bruyn G, Wang J, Purvis A, Ruiz MS, Adhikarla H, Alvi S, Bonaparte MI, Brune D, Bueso A, Canter RM, Ceregido MA, Deshmukh S, Diemert D, Finn A, Forrat R, Fu B, Gallais J, Griffin P, Grillet MH, Haney O, Henderson JA, Koutsoukos M, Launay O, Torres FM, Masotti R, Michael NL, Park J, Rivera-Medina DM, Romanyak N, Rook C, Schuerman L, Sher LD, Tavares-Da-Silva F, Whittington A, Chicz RM, Gurunathan S, Savarino S, and Sridhar S
- Abstract
Background: In a parallel-group, international, phase 3 study (ClinicalTrials.govNCT04762680), we evaluated prototype (D614) and Beta (B.1.351) variant recombinant spike protein booster vaccines with AS03-adjuvant (CoV2 preS dTM-AS03)., Methods: Adults, previously primed with mRNA (BNT162b2, mRNA-1273), adenovirus-vectored (Ad26.CoV2.S, ChAdOx1nCoV-19) or protein (CoV2 preS dTM-AS03 [monovalent D614; MV(D614)]) vaccines were enrolled between 29 July 2021 and 22 February 2022. Participants were stratified by age (18-55 and ≥ 56 years) and received one of the following CoV2 preS dTM-AS03 booster formulations: MV(D614) (n = 1285), MV(B.1.351) (n = 707) or bivalent D614 + B.1.351 (BiV; n = 625). Unvaccinated adults who tested negative on a SARS-CoV-2 rapid diagnostic test (control group, n = 479) received two primary doses, 21 days apart, of MV(D614). Anti-D614G and anti-B.1.351 antibodies were evaluated using validated pseudovirus (lentivirus) neutralization (PsVN) assay 14 days post-booster (day [D]15) in 18-55-year-old BNT162b2-primed participants and compared with those pre-booster (D1) and on D36 in 18-55-year-old controls (primary immunogenicity endpoints). PsVN titers to Omicron BA.1, BA.2 and BA.4/5 subvariants were also evaluated. Safety was evaluated over a 12-month follow-up period. Planned interim analyses are presented up to 14 days post-last vaccination for immunogenicity and over a median duration of 5 months for safety., Findings: All three boosters elicited robust anti-D614G or -B.1.351 PsVN responses for mRNA, adenovirus-vectored and protein vaccine-primed groups. Among BNT162b2-primed adults (18-55 years), geometric means of the individual post-booster versus pre-booster titer ratio (95% confidence interval [CI]) were: for MV (D614), 23.37 (18.58-29.38) (anti-D614G); for MV(B.1.351), 35.41 (26.71-46.95) (anti-B.1.351); and for BiV, 14.39 (11.39-18.28) (anti-D614G) and 34.18 (25.84-45.22 (anti-B.1.351). GMT ratios (98.3% CI) versus post-primary vaccination GMTs in controls, were: for MV(D614) booster, 2.16 (1.69; 2.75) [anti-D614G]; for MV(B.1.351), 1.96 (1.54; 2.50) [anti-B.1.351]; and for BiV, 2.34 (1.84; 2.96) [anti-D614G] and 1.39 (1.09; 1.77) [anti-B.1.351]. All booster formulations elicited cross-neutralizing antibodies against Omicron BA.2 (across priming vaccine subgroups), Omicron BA.1 (BNT162b2-primed participants) and Omicron BA.4/5 (BNT162b2-primed participants and MV D614-primed participants). Similar patterns in antibody responses were observed for participants aged ≥56 years. Reactogenicity tended to be transient and mild-to-moderate severity in all booster groups. No safety concerns were identified., Interpretation: CoV2 preS dTM-AS03 boosters demonstrated acceptable safety and elicited robust neutralizing antibodies against multiple variants, regardless of priming vaccine., Funding: Sanofi and Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA)., Competing Interests: GdB, JW, AP, MSR, HA, MIB, RMCa, RF, BF, JG, M-HG, SG, OH, RM, JP, NR, RMCh and SSr are Sanofi employees. GdB, AP, MIB, BF, OH, NR, RMCh and SSr hold stock or stock options in Sanofi. SSa was a Sanofi employee at the time of study conduct and held shares and/or stock options in the company at the time of study conduct. GdB, SSr, RMCh, and SSa are inventors on a pending patent application filed by Sanofi and GSK for the development of the CoV-2 dTM vaccine. MAC, LS and MK are employed by GSK and hold restricted shares in the GSK group of companies. FTDS was employed by GSK and held restricted shares in the GSK group of companies, at the time of the study. FMT declares trial fees paid to their institution by Sanofi; honoraria received from GSK group of companies, Pfizer Inc., Sanofi, MSD, Moderna, Biofabri, AstraZeneca, Novavax, Janssen; meeting and/or travel fees received from Pfizer Inc, MSD, GSK and Sanofi; data safety monitoring board or advisory board participation for Pfizer and Biofabri; being a member of ETAGE–WHO Europe, coordinator of the Spanish Pediatric Critical Trials Network and coordinator of the WHO Collaborating Centre for Vaccines Safety of Santiago de Compostela; and payments made to their institution for their role as principal investigator in randomized controlled trials for Ablynx, Abbot, Seqirus, Sanofi, MSD, Merck, Pfizer, Roche, Regeneron, Janssen, Medimmune, Novavax, Novartis and GSK. DMRM declares that her institution received funding from Sanofi. AF receives research funding, paid to his employers, from Sanofi both for work related to this study and other unrelated vaccine trials and from GSK for other unrelated studies. He receives research funding from other vaccine manufacturers relating to trials and studies and undertakes paid consultancy related to a number of developmental antimicrobial drugs and vaccines. OL declares that their institution received funding for conducting the trial. NLM received travel support from Sanofi and chaired a Scientific Advisory Board for them, unrelated to current study. LDS received a research grant from Sanofi. SD, SA, DB, AB, DD, PG, JAH, CR and AW declare no conflicts of interest., (© 2023 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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