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Inflammatory parameters associated with systemic reactogenicity following vaccination with adjuvanted hepatitis B vaccines in humans
Authors:Wivine Burny  Arnaud Marchant  Caroline Hervé  Andrea Callegaro  Magalie Caubet  Laurence Fissette  Lien Gheyle  Catherine Legrand  Cheikh Ndour  Fernanda Tavares Da Silva  Robbert van der Most  Fabienne Willems  Arnaud M. Didierlaurent  Juan Yarzabal
Affiliation:1. GSK, Rixensart/Wavre, Belgium;2. Institute for Medical Immunology, Université libre de Bruxelles, Charleroi, Belgium;3. SGS Life Science Services, Antwerp, Belgium;4. Institute of Statistics, Biostatistics and Actuarial Sciences (ISBA), Université Catholique de Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium
Abstract:

Background

Adjuvants like AS01B increase the immunogenicity of vaccines and generally cause increased transient reactogenicity compared with Alum. A phase II randomized trial was conducted to characterize the response to AS01B and Alum adjuvanted vaccines. A post-hoc analysis was performed to examine the associations between reactogenicity and innate immune parameters.

Methods

The trial involved 60 hepatitis B-naïve adults aged 18–45?years randomized 1:1 to receive either two doses of HBsAg-AS01B on Day (D)0 and D30, or three doses of HBsAg-Alum on D0, D30, D180. Prior to vaccination, all subjects received placebo injection in order to differentiate the impact of injection process and the vaccination. Main outcomes included reactogenicity symptoms, vital signs, blood cytokines, biochemical and hematological parameters after vaccination. Associations were explored using linear regression.

Findings

The vaccine with AS01B induced higher HBsAg-specific antibody levels than Alum. Local and systemic symptoms were more frequent in individuals who received HBsAg AS01B/Alum vaccine or placebo, but were mild and short-lived. Blood levels of C-reactive protein (CRP), bilirubin, leukocyte, monocyte and neutrophil counts increased rapidly and transiently after AS01B but not after Alum or placebo. Lymphocyte counts decreased in the AS01B group and lactate dehydrogenase levels decreased after Alum. Modelling revealed associations between systemic symptoms and increased levels of CRP and IL-6 after the first HBsAg-AS01B or HBsAg-Alum immunization. Following the second vaccine dose, CRP, IL-6, IP-10, IFN-γ, MIP-1β and MCP-2 were identified as key parameters associated with systemic symptoms. These observations were confirmed using an independent data set extracted from a previous study of the immune response to HBsAg-adjuvanted vaccines (NCT00805389).

Conclusions

IL-6 and IFN-γ signals were associated with systemic reactogenicity following administration of AS01B-adjuvanted vaccine. These signals were similar to those previously associated with antibody and T-cell responses induced by HBsAg-adjuvanted vaccines, suggesting that similar innate immune signals may underlie adjuvant reactogenicity and immunogenicity.Trial registration: www.clinicaltrials.gov NCT01777295.
Keywords:HBsAg-AS01B adjuvanted vaccine  Reactogenicity  Innate response  Association with systemic symptoms  IFNγ signals  IL-6 signals  AE  adverse event  CI  confidence interval  DX(hY)  day X at hour Y  CRP  C-reactive protein  HBsAg  hepatitis B surface antigen  HBV  hepatitis B virus  IP-10  inducible protein 10  LDH  lactate dehydrogenase  MIP-1β  macrophage inflammatory protein-1β  MCP-2  monocyte chemotactic protein 2  MPL  pIMD  piMD, potential immune-mediated disease  PC  principal component  PCA  principal component analysis  SAE  serious adverse event
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