Safety and Immunogenicity of a Carbohydrate Fatty Acid Monosulphate Ester Adjuvant Combined with a Low-Dose Quadrivalent Split-Virion Inactivated Influenza Vaccine: A Randomised, Observer-Blind, Active-Controlled, First-in-Human, Phase 1 Study
Author:
D’Onofrio Valentino1ORCID, Porrez Sharon1, Jacobs Bart1ORCID, Alhatemi Azhar1, De Boever Fien1, Waerlop Gwenn1ORCID, Michels Els2, Vanni Francesca3, Manenti Alessandro3, Leroux-Roels Geert1, Platenburg Peter Paul4ORCID, Hilgers Luuk4, Leroux-Roels Isabel1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Center for Vaccinology (CEVAC), Ghent University and Ghent University Hospital, Corneel Heymanslaan 10, 9000 Ghent, Belgium 2. Harmony Clinical Research BV, 9090 Melle, Belgium 3. VisMederi S.r.l., 53035 Monteriggioni, Italy 4. LiteVax, 4061 BJ Ophemert, The Netherlands
Abstract
Seasonal influenza vaccine effectiveness is low. Carbohydrate fatty acid monosulphate ester (CMS), a new oil-in-water adjuvant, has proven potency in animal models with suggested capacity for dose-sparing. The objective was to evaluate safety and immunogenicity of CMS when added to a low-dose influenza vaccine (QIV) in humans. In a randomised, double-blind, active-controlled, first-in-human study, sixty participants (18–50 years) received either 0.5 mg CMS or 2 mg CMS with 1/5th dose QIV, or a full dose QIV without CMS. Adverse events (AE) were monitored until 7 days post-vaccination. Haemagglutinin inhibition (HI) titres in serum and CD4+ T cells in PBMCs were determined at day 0, 7, 28, and 180. Mean age was 37.6 (±10.1) years and 42/60 (70.0%) were female. Pain at injection site (42/60, 86.7%) and headache (34/60, 56.7%) were reported most and more frequently in the 2 mg CMS group. HI titres and the frequency of influenza specific CD4+ T cells were equal across strains for the three cohorts on all visits, increased until day 28 and decreased at day 180 to values higher than baseline. CMS was safe in humans. Humoral and cell-mediated immunogenicity was similar across vaccines, even with 1/5th antigen dose. CMS can have beneficial implications in low-resource settings or in a pandemic context.
Funder
European Union Horizon 2020 programme Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of India
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