Safety and immunogenicity of multiple and higher doses of an inactivated influenza A/H5N1 vaccine

John H Beigel, Jocelyn Voell, Chiung-yu Huang, Peter D Burbelo, H Clifford Lane, John H Beigel, Jocelyn Voell, Chiung-yu Huang, Peter D Burbelo, H Clifford Lane

Abstract

Background: H5N1 avian influenza represents an episodic zoonotic disease with the potential to cause a pandemic, and antiviral resistance is of considerable concern. We sought to generate high-titer H5N1 antibodies in healthy volunteers for the purpose of developing hyperimmune intravenous immunoglobulin.

Methods: We conducted a dose-escalating, unblinded clinical trial involving 75 subjects aged 18-59 years. Three cohorts of twenty-five subjects were enrolled sequentially and received 90, 120, or 180 microg of H5N1 A/Vietnam/1203/04 vaccine in 4 doses administered approximately 28 days apart.

Results: No statistically significant dose-related increases in the geometric mean titers (GMTs) of serum hemagglutination inhibition antibody were observed when the 90-microg, 120-microg, and 180-microg cohorts were compared. When the cohorts were analyzed together to determine the effect of additional vaccinations, the GMTs of hemagglutination inhibition antibody after the first, second, third, and fourth vaccinations were 1:15.7, 1:22.2, 1:36.0, and 1:32.0, respectively (first vaccination vs. baseline, P<.001; second vs. first vaccination, P=.02; and third vs. second vaccination, P<.001). The microneutralization GMTs after the first, second, third, and fourth vaccinations were 1:17.5, 1:33.1, 1:55.7, and 1:68.4, respectively (P<.001 for all comparisons).

Conclusion: The results of our study suggest that a third and fourth dose of the H5N1 A/Vietnam/1203/04 vaccine may result in higher hemagglutination inhibition and microneutralization GMTs, compared with the GMTs resulting from fewer doses. There was no benefit to increasing the dose of the vaccine.

Trial registration: Clinical Trials.gov identifier: NCT00383071.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Aggregate HAI and Microneutralization geometric mean titer and 95% confidence interval by vaccination day
Figure 2
Figure 2
Proportion of subject with a low (

Figure 3

Aggregate GMT anti-HA-1 antibody titer…

Figure 3

Aggregate GMT anti-HA-1 antibody titer and 95% confidence interval determined by LIPS by…

Figure 3
Aggregate GMT anti-HA-1 antibody titer and 95% confidence interval determined by LIPS by study day

Figure 4

GMT anti-HA-1 titer antibody and…

Figure 4

GMT anti-HA-1 titer antibody and 95% confidence interval determined by LIPS by study…

Figure 4
GMT anti-HA-1 titer antibody and 95% confidence interval determined by LIPS by study day in 12 Subjects with no immune response through all planned vaccinations as measured by HAI

Figure 5

Aggregate HAI and Microneutralization geometric…

Figure 5

Aggregate HAI and Microneutralization geometric mean titer and 95% confidence interval by vaccination…

Figure 5
Aggregate HAI and Microneutralization geometric mean titer and 95% confidence interval by vaccination site and vaccination day
Figure 3
Figure 3
Aggregate GMT anti-HA-1 antibody titer and 95% confidence interval determined by LIPS by study day
Figure 4
Figure 4
GMT anti-HA-1 titer antibody and 95% confidence interval determined by LIPS by study day in 12 Subjects with no immune response through all planned vaccinations as measured by HAI
Figure 5
Figure 5
Aggregate HAI and Microneutralization geometric mean titer and 95% confidence interval by vaccination site and vaccination day

Source: PubMed

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