Quadrivalent Meningococcal Vaccination of Adults: Phase III Comparison of an Investigational Conjugate Vaccine,MenACWY-CRM,with the Licensed Vaccine,Menactra |
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Authors: | Keith S. Reisinger Roger Baxter Stanley L. Block Jina Shah Lisa Bedell Peter M. Dull |
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Affiliation: | Primary Physicians Research, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,1. Kaiser Permanente Vaccine Study Center, Oakland, California,2. Kentucky Pediatric and Adult Research, Inc., Bardstown, Kentucky,3. Novartis Vaccines and Diagnostics, Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts4. |
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Abstract: | Neisseria meningitidis is a leading cause of bacterial meningitis in the United States, with the highest case fatality rates reported for individuals ≥15 years of age. This study compares the safety and immunogenicity of the Novartis Vaccines investigational quadrivalent meningococcal CRM197 conjugate vaccine, MenACWY-CRM, to those of the licensed meningococcal conjugate vaccine, Menactra, when administered to healthy adults. In this phase III multicenter study, 1,359 adults 19 to 55 years of age were randomly assigned to one of four groups (1:1:1:1 ratio) to receive a single dose of one of three lots of MenACWY-CRM or a single dose of Menactra. Serum samples obtained at baseline and 1 month postvaccination were tested for serogroup-specific serum bactericidal activity using human complement (hSBA). The hSBA titers following vaccination with MenACWY-CRM and Menactra were compared in noninferiority and prespecified superiority analyses. Reactogenicity was similar in the MenACWY-CRM and Menactra groups, and neither vaccine was associated with a serious adverse event. When compared with Menactra, MenACWY-CRM met the superiority criteria for the proportions of recipients achieving a seroresponse against serogroups C, W-135, and Y and the proportion of subjects achieving postvaccination titers of ≥1:8 for serogroups C and Y. MenACWY-CRM''s immunogenicity was statistically noninferior (the lower limit of the two-sided 95% confidence interval was more than −10%) to that of Menactra for all four serogroups, with the postvaccination hSBA geometric mean titers being consistently higher for MenACWY-CRM than for Menactra. MenACWY-CRM is well tolerated in adults 19 to 55 years of age, with immune responses to each of the serogroups noninferior and, in some cases, statistically superior to those to Menactra.Neisseria meningitidis is a leading cause of bacterial meningitis in the United States (11). While the incidence of meningococcal disease is highest in infants, the highest case fatality rates are observed among older subjects: 4.6% in children <15 years of age, 22.5% in individuals 15 to 24 years of age, and 16.5% in adults >25 years of age (5). In 2007, approximately 72% of all cases of meningococcal disease in the United States were reported in individuals ≥18 years of age (4a).Two quadrivalent meningococcal vaccines, for prevention of meningococcal disease caused by serogroups A, C, W-135, and Y, are available in the United States: an unconjugated polysaccharide vaccine (MPSV4 [Menomune]; Sanofi Pasteur, Inc., Swiftwater, PA) and a diphtheria toxoid protein conjugated vaccine (Menactra; Sanofi Pasteur, Inc., Swiftwater, PA). In the United States, the quadrivalent meningococcal polysaccharide protein conjugate vaccine is currently recommended for all persons 11 to 18 years of age and for those persons 2 to 55 years of age who are at increased risk of meningococcal disease (4). This vaccine is only available in the United States and Canada. Outside North America, polysaccharide vaccines are the only quadrivalent meningococcal vaccines available.To expand the options for prevention of meningococcal disease, an investigational quadrivalent meningococcal CRM197 conjugate vaccine (MenACWY-CRM; Novartis Vaccines, Siena, Italy) was recently developed. Studies have shown that MenACWY-CRM is well tolerated and elicits robust immunogenicity when administered to infants as young as 2 months of age (10, 12), as well as children (2a) and adolescents (9). A large, randomized, controlled, direct comparative phase III study was recently completed, examining the safety and immunogenicity of MenACWY-CRM versus those of Menactra when administered to healthy subjects 11 to 55 years of age. Due to differences in expected immune responses between adolescents and adults, the predefined analyses were powered and analyzed separately for the 11- to 18-year-old and 19- to 55-year-old groups. The larger adolescent age stratum included in the study was powered to demonstrate the consistency of the immune response to three lots of MenACWY-CRM, and the results showed that MenACWY-CRM generated a significantly higher immune response to all four serogroups than Menactra (8). Here, we present the analysis of the safety and immunogenicity of MenACWY-CRM versus those of Menactra among the adult subjects 19 to 55 years of age. |
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