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Immunogenicity and safety following a homologous booster dose of a SARS-CoV-2 recombinant spike protein vaccine with Matrix-MTMadjuvant (NVX-CoV2373) versus a primary series in people living with and without HIV-1 infection in South Africa: A randomized crossover phase 2a/2b trial

Authors :
Shinde, Vivek
Lombard Koen, Anthonet
Hoosain, Zaheer
Archary, Moherndran
Bhorat, Qasim
Fairlie, Lee
Lalloo, Umesh
Masilela, Mduduzi S. L.
Moodley, Dhayendre
Hanley, Sherika
Fouche, Leon Frederik
Louw, Cheryl
Tameris, Michele
Singh, Nishanta
Goga, Ameena
Dheda, Keertan
Grobbelaar, Coert
Joseph, Natasha
Lombaard, Johan J.
Mngqibisa, Rosie
Bhorat, As’ad Ebrahim
Benadé, Gabriella
Lalloo, Natasha
Pitsi, Anna
Vollgraaff, Pieter-Louis
Luabeya, Angelique
Esmail, Aliasgar
Petrick, Friedrich G.
Oommen Jose, Aylin
Foulkes, Sharne
Ahmed, Khatija
Thombrayil, Asha
Kalonji, Dishiki
Cloney-Clark, Shane
Zhu, Mingzhu
Bennett, Chijioke
Albert, Gary
Marcheschi, Alex
Plested, Joyce S.
Neal, Susan
Chau, Gordon
Cho, Iksung
Fries, Louis
Glenn, Greg M.
Madhi, Shabir A.
Source :
Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics; December 2024, Vol. 20 Issue: 1
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

ABSTRACTCOVID-19 remains a global public health issue and an improved understanding of vaccine performance in immunocompromised individuals, including people living with HIV (PLWH), is needed. Initial data from the present study’s pre-crossover/booster phase were previously reported. This phase 2a/b clinical trial in South Africa (2019nCoV-501/NCT04533399) revisits 1:1 randomly assigned HIV-negative adults (18–84 years) and medically stable PLWH (18–64 years) who previously received two NVX-CoV2373 doses (5 μg recombinant Spike protein with 50 μg Matrix-M™ adjuvant) or placebo. During the 6-month blinded crossover/booster phase, NVX-CoV2373 recipients could receive a single NVX-CoV2373 booster dose and placebo recipients a 2-dose NVX-CoV2373 primary series. NVX-CoV2373 safety and immunogenicity were assessed according to prior SARS-CoV-2 infection and HIV status. Post-crossover, 1900/3793 NVX-CoV2373 recipients were assigned another dose, and 1893/3793 placebo recipients were assigned NVX-CoV2373 primary series. Approximately 56% of the participants were SARS-CoV-2–seropositive (“seropositive”) at crossover (6% PLWH). In seropositive participants (HIV-negative and PLWH), booster-dose anti-spike IgG, MN50and hACE2 inhibition responses increased to similar levels, exceeding those in seronegative participants. In primary-series and booster cohorts, seronegative PLWH showed higher neutralizing responses (4.9- to 5.5-fold, respectively) versus peak pre-crossover primary-series responses. The safety profile was similar among the pre-crossover/booster phase groups; solicited and unsolicited adverse events were infrequent in all groups. A single NVX-CoV2373 booster dose substantially increased antibodies. All baseline seropositive participants showed higher immune responses than seronegative participants. These findings support use of NVX-CoV2373, including in immunocompromised individuals.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21645515 and 2164554X
Volume :
20
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs68342732
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2024.2425147