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Safety and immunogenicity of an investigational vaccine containing two common pneumococcal proteins in toddlers: a phase II randomized clinical trial

R. Prymula, P. Pazdiora, M. Traskine, JU. Rüggeberg, D. Borys,

. 2014 ; 32 (25) : 3025-34.

Language English Country Netherlands

Document type Clinical Trial, Phase II, Journal Article, Multicenter Study, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

E-resources Online Full text

NLK ProQuest Central from 2002-01-01 to 2 months ago
Nursing & Allied Health Database (ProQuest) from 2002-01-01 to 2 months ago
Health & Medicine (ProQuest) from 2002-01-01 to 2 months ago
Family Health Database (ProQuest) from 2002-01-01 to 2 months ago
Health Management Database (ProQuest) from 2002-01-01 to 2 months ago
Public Health Database (ProQuest) from 2002-01-01 to 2 months ago

BACKGROUND: To provide broader protection against pneumococcal disease, new vaccines containing conserved Streptococcus pneumoniae proteins are being developed. This study assessed the safety, reactogenicity and immunogenicity of four formulations containing pneumococcal proteins pneumolysin toxoid (dPly) and histidine triad protein (PhtD) in toddlers. METHODS: In this phase II, multicenter, observer-blind study (www.clinicaltrials.gov: NCT00985751) conducted in the Czech Republic, toddlers (12-23 months) were randomized (1:1:1:1:1) to receive one of four investigational vaccine formulations (10 or 30μg each of dPly and PhtD, alone or in combination with polysaccharide conjugates from the pneumococcal non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae protein-D conjugate vaccine [PHiD-CV]), or the licensed PHiD-CV, in a 2-dose primary series plus booster at study months 0, 2 and 6. Solicited local and general symptoms were recorded within seven days post-vaccination, unsolicited symptoms within 31 days post-vaccination, and serious adverse events (SAEs) during the entire study period. Antibody concentrations against the vaccine components were measured pre-vaccination, one month post-dose 2, pre- and one month post-booster. RESULTS: 257 toddlers were enrolled and vaccinated. Percentages of solicited local and general symptoms following the different investigational formulations were generally within the same ranges as for PHiD-CV. After each dose, grade 3 fever (>40.0°C, rectal measurement) was reported for maximum one toddler in each group with no differences between investigational formulations and PHiD-CV during primary vaccination. 23 SAEs were reported for 17 toddlers, with distribution balanced between all groups except the group receiving 30 μg dPly/PhtD with PHiD-CV-conjugates (no SAEs reported). None of the SAEs were considered to be vaccine-related. For all pneumococcal protein-containing formulations, anti-PhtD and anti-Ply antibody geometric mean concentrations increased from pre-vaccination to post-dose 2 and from pre- to post-booster vaccination. CONCLUSION: All investigational vaccine formulations were well-tolerated and immunogenic when administered to toddlers as a 2-dose primary vaccination followed by a booster dose.

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