Priming effect of dengue and yellow fever vaccination on the immunogenicity, infectivity, and safety of a tetravalent dengue vaccine in humans

Ming Qiao, David Shaw, Remi Forrat, Anh Wartel-Tram, Jean Lang, Ming Qiao, David Shaw, Remi Forrat, Anh Wartel-Tram, Jean Lang

Abstract

A dengue vaccine effective against all four serotypes is urgently needed. However, safety and immunogenicity could be affected by prior exposure to flaviviruses. This open, controlled, phase IIa study was conducted in 35 healthy adults who had received monovalent, live attenuated Vero cell-derived dengue vaccine against dengue virus 1 (VDV1) or 2 (VDV2) or yellow fever (YF) vaccine 1 year before or who were flavivirus-naïve. All participants received one subcutaneous injection of tetravalent dengue vaccine (TDV) and were followed for 180 days. Previous vaccination did not increase reactogenicity, laboratory abnormalities, or incidence of vaccine viremia, but it did increase the neutralizing antibody response to dengue virus that persisted at day 180. There was no increase in YF antibodies in participants previously immunized with YF vaccine. Prior exposure to YF or monovalent dengue vaccines had no adverse effects on the safety or incidence of viremia associated with this TDV, but it increased immunogenicity.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Seropositivity rate against each dengue serotype (parental dengue strain) before and 28, 60, and 180 days after a single injection of tetravalent dengue vaccine. Error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals.

Source: PubMed

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