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A randomised, single-blind, dose-range study to assess the immunogenicity and safety of a cell-culture-derived A/H1N1 influenza vaccine in adult and elderly populations.
Vaccine. 2012 Jul 06; 30(32):4820-7.V

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Modern cell-culture production techniques and the use of adjuvants helps to ensure that the global demand for pandemic influenza vaccine can be met. This study aimed to assess the immunogenicty and safety profiles of various cell-culture-derived A/H1N1 pandemic vaccine formulations in healthy adult and elderly subjects.

METHODS

Adult (18-60 years) subjects (n=544) received vaccine either containing 3.75 μg of antigen with half the standard dose of MF59 (Novartis Vaccines and Diagnostics) adjuvant, 7.5 μg antigen with a full dose of MF59, or a non-adjuvanted vaccine containing 15 μg of antigen. Elderly (≥ 61 years) subjects (n=268) received either the 3.75 μg or 7.5 μg adjuvanted formulations. Two priming vaccine doses were administered 3 weeks apart, followed by a single booster dose of seasonal influenza vaccine 1 year later. Immunogenicity was assessed 3 weeks after each vaccination. The safety profile of each formulation was evaluated throughout the study.

RESULTS

A single primary dose of each A/H1N1 vaccine formulation was sufficient to meet all three European (CHMP) licensure criteria for pandemic influenza vaccines in adult subjects. Two licensure criteria were met after one vaccine dose in elderly subjects; two primary doses were required to meet all three criteria in this age group. The highest antibody titres were observed in response to the 7.5 μg vaccine containing a full dose of MF59 adjuvant. All subjects rapidly generated seroprotective antibody titres in response to booster vaccination.

CONCLUSION

This study identified one 3.75 μg vaccine dose containing half the standard dose of MF59 adjuvant as optimal for adults, two doses were optimal for elderly subjects. The antigen-sparing properties of MF59, and rapid, modern, cell-culture production techniques represent significant steps towards meeting the global demand for influenza vaccine.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Division of Communicable Diseases, Institute for Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Multicenter Study
Randomized Controlled Trial
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

22626675

Citation

Hatz, Christoph, et al. "A Randomised, Single-blind, Dose-range Study to Assess the Immunogenicity and Safety of a Cell-culture-derived A/H1N1 Influenza Vaccine in Adult and Elderly Populations." Vaccine, vol. 30, no. 32, 2012, pp. 4820-7.
Hatz C, Cramer JP, Vertruyen A, et al. A randomised, single-blind, dose-range study to assess the immunogenicity and safety of a cell-culture-derived A/H1N1 influenza vaccine in adult and elderly populations. Vaccine. 2012;30(32):4820-7.
Hatz, C., Cramer, J. P., Vertruyen, A., Schwarz, T. F., von Sonnenburg, F., Borkowski, A., Lattanzi, M., Hilbert, A. K., Cioppa, G. D., & Leroux-Roels, G. (2012). A randomised, single-blind, dose-range study to assess the immunogenicity and safety of a cell-culture-derived A/H1N1 influenza vaccine in adult and elderly populations. Vaccine, 30(32), 4820-7. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2012.05.013
Hatz C, et al. A Randomised, Single-blind, Dose-range Study to Assess the Immunogenicity and Safety of a Cell-culture-derived A/H1N1 Influenza Vaccine in Adult and Elderly Populations. Vaccine. 2012 Jul 6;30(32):4820-7. PubMed PMID: 22626675.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - A randomised, single-blind, dose-range study to assess the immunogenicity and safety of a cell-culture-derived A/H1N1 influenza vaccine in adult and elderly populations. AU - Hatz,Christoph, AU - Cramer,Jakob P, AU - Vertruyen,André, AU - Schwarz,Tino F, AU - von Sonnenburg,Frank, AU - Borkowski,Astrid, AU - Lattanzi,Maria, AU - Hilbert,Anne Katrin, AU - Cioppa,Giovanni Della, AU - Leroux-Roels,Geert, Y1 - 2012/05/22/ PY - 2011/11/21/received PY - 2012/05/04/revised PY - 2012/05/09/accepted PY - 2012/5/26/entrez PY - 2012/5/26/pubmed PY - 2012/10/26/medline SP - 4820 EP - 7 JF - Vaccine JO - Vaccine VL - 30 IS - 32 N2 - BACKGROUND: Modern cell-culture production techniques and the use of adjuvants helps to ensure that the global demand for pandemic influenza vaccine can be met. This study aimed to assess the immunogenicty and safety profiles of various cell-culture-derived A/H1N1 pandemic vaccine formulations in healthy adult and elderly subjects. METHODS: Adult (18-60 years) subjects (n=544) received vaccine either containing 3.75 μg of antigen with half the standard dose of MF59 (Novartis Vaccines and Diagnostics) adjuvant, 7.5 μg antigen with a full dose of MF59, or a non-adjuvanted vaccine containing 15 μg of antigen. Elderly (≥ 61 years) subjects (n=268) received either the 3.75 μg or 7.5 μg adjuvanted formulations. Two priming vaccine doses were administered 3 weeks apart, followed by a single booster dose of seasonal influenza vaccine 1 year later. Immunogenicity was assessed 3 weeks after each vaccination. The safety profile of each formulation was evaluated throughout the study. RESULTS: A single primary dose of each A/H1N1 vaccine formulation was sufficient to meet all three European (CHMP) licensure criteria for pandemic influenza vaccines in adult subjects. Two licensure criteria were met after one vaccine dose in elderly subjects; two primary doses were required to meet all three criteria in this age group. The highest antibody titres were observed in response to the 7.5 μg vaccine containing a full dose of MF59 adjuvant. All subjects rapidly generated seroprotective antibody titres in response to booster vaccination. CONCLUSION: This study identified one 3.75 μg vaccine dose containing half the standard dose of MF59 adjuvant as optimal for adults, two doses were optimal for elderly subjects. The antigen-sparing properties of MF59, and rapid, modern, cell-culture production techniques represent significant steps towards meeting the global demand for influenza vaccine. SN - 1873-2518 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/22626675/A_randomised_single_blind_dose_range_study_to_assess_the_immunogenicity_and_safety_of_a_cell_culture_derived_A/H1N1_influenza_vaccine_in_adult_and_elderly_populations_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0264-410X(12)00705-0 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -