Gabriele Maurer, Vera Buerger, Julian Larcher-Senn, D I Florian Erlsbacher, Katrin Dubischar, Susanne Eder-Lingelbach, Juan-Carlos Jaramillo
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Chikungunya disease, caused by chikungunya virus (CHIKV), is associated with substantial morbidity, including debilitating CHIKV-related arthralgia.
Methods: Three clinical trials of a CHIKV vaccine (VLA1553, IXCHIQ®) were conducted in the US: a Phase 1 dose-finding trial, a pivotal Phase 3 trial, and a Phase 3 lot-to-lot consistency trial. Participants were healthy adults (≥18 years) and received a single intramuscular dose of VLA1553 (3520 participants) or placebo (1033 participants). Solicited injection site and systemic adverse events (AEs) (10 to 14 days post-vaccination), unsolicited AEs (28 and 180 days post-vaccination), AEs of special interest (AESIs) (28 days post-vaccination), medically attended AEs (MAAEs), serious AEs (SAEs) (180 days post-vaccination), and pregnancies were evaluated. Safety data were pooled, and analyses were descriptive.
Results: Overall, 63.7% of participants receiving VLA1553 experienced AEs, (44.7% for placebo), that were generally mild. Solicited injection site AEs, solicited systemic AEs, and unsolicited (Day 29) AEs were reported by 15.5%, 50.9%, 22.7% of participants who received VLA1553 and 11.1%, 26.9%, 13.4% who received placebo. Arthralgia was reported by 16.7% of participants who received VLA1553 and 4.8% of participants who received placebo; none required medical attention. MAAEs, AESIs, and SAEs were reported by 12.4%, 0.3%, 1.5% of participants who received VLA1553 and 11.3%, 0.1%, 0.8% of participants who received placebo. Protocol-defined AESIs were mild and short-lived, and two VLA1553-related SAEs resolved without sequelae. There were no clinically important differences in AE incidence based on age or medical history, and no VLA1553-related adverse pregnancy outcomes. There were 3 deaths (2 in the VLA1553 group and 1 in the placebo group), none was vaccine-related.
Conclusions: A single dose of VLA1553 presented with an excellent local tolerability profile and overall safety in line with that expected for a live-attenuated vaccine. The safety profile was comparable in participants aged 18-64 years and ≥65 years.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Travel Medicine is a publication that focuses on travel medicine and its intersection with other disciplines. It publishes cutting-edge research, consensus papers, policy papers, and expert reviews. The journal is affiliated with the Asia Pacific Travel Health Society.
The journal's main areas of interest include the prevention and management of travel-associated infections, non-communicable diseases, vaccines, malaria prevention and treatment, multi-drug resistant pathogens, and surveillance on all individuals crossing international borders.
The Journal of Travel Medicine is indexed in multiple major indexing services, including Adis International Ltd., CABI, EBSCOhost, Elsevier BV, Gale, Journal Watch Infectious Diseases (Online), MetaPress, National Library of Medicine, OCLC, Ovid, ProQuest, Thomson Reuters, and the U.S. National Library of Medicine.