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Safety and immunogenicity of a next-generation live-attenuated yellow fever vaccine produced in a Vero cell line in the USA: a phase 1 randomised, observer-blind, active-controlled, dose-ranging clinical trial - 28/11/24

Doi : 10.1016/S1473-3099(24)00406-7 
Kayvon Modjarrad, MD a, *, , Paul T Scott, MD a, *, , Melanie McCauley, MD a, c, Brittany Ober-Shepherd, MD a, c, Erica Sondergaard, RN a, c, Mihret F Amare, MBA a, c, Ajay P Parikh, MS a, c, Badryah Omar, MSc a, c, Ada-Marie Minutello, MD d, Haritha Adhikarla, PhD e, Yukun Wu, PhD e, Andrey Rojas P, MD f, Valentine Delore, PharmD d, Nathalie Mantel, PhD d, Meshell N Morrison, CCRC g, Kamila S Kourbanova, MSc g, Melissa E Martinez, CCRP g, Ivelese Guzman, LPN g, Melissa E Greenleaf, BSN g, Janice M Darden, MS b, c, Michael A Koren, MD g, Melinda J Hamer, MD g, h, i, Christine E Lee, MD g, Jack N Hutter, MD g, Sheila A Peel, PhD b, Merlin L Robb, MD c, Manuel Vangelisti, MSc d, Emmanuel Feroldi, MD d,
a Emerging Infectious Diseases Branch, Center for Infectious Disease Research, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD, USA 
b Diagnostics and Countermeasures Branch, Center for Infectious Disease Research, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD, USA 
c Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine, Bethesda, MD, USA 
d Sanofi, Marcy L’Etoile, France 
e Sanofi, Swiftwater, PA, USA 
f Sanofi, Bogotá, Colombia 
g Clinical Trials Center, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Bethesda, MD, USA 
h Department of Military and Emergency Medicine, Uniformed Services University, Bethesda, MD, USA 
i Department of Emergency Medicine, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC, USA 

* Correspondence to: Dr Emmanuel Feroldi, Sanofi, 69280 Marcy-l’Étoile, France Sanofi Marcy-l’Étoile 69280 France

Summary

Background

Recent outbreaks between 2015–17 and production delays have led to a yellow fever vaccine shortage. Therefore, there is an urgent need for new yellow fever vaccines with improved production scalability. A next-generation live-attenuated yellow fever vaccine candidate (vYF), produced in a Vero cell line has shown similar immunogenicity to licensed yellow fever vaccines in preclinical studies. In this study, we aimed to report the safety and immunogenicity of vYF in human clinical trial participants.

Methods

In this first in-human, phase 1 randomised, observer-blind, active-controlled, dose-ranging clinical trial conducted at a single centre in the USA (Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Silver Spring, MD, USA), 72 healthy adults (aged 18–60 years), without a known history of flavivirus infection or vaccination were randomly assigned (1:1:1:1) using interactive response technology to receive one dose of either vYF at 4, 5 or 6 Log CCID50 or the licensed YF-VAX (18 individuals per group). The primary outcomes were safety, neutralising antibody (NAb) titres through D180 post-vaccination in the per-protocol analysis set (comprised of yellow fever-naive participants who received their intended vaccine and provided a valid post-vaccination blood sample), and occurrence, and level of yellow fever viraemia in each vaccine group through D14 post-vaccination.

Findings

All vYF doses had a safety and tolerability profile similar to YF-VAX. The most frequently reported solicited injection site reactions (vYF groups vs YF-VAX group) were pain (22% [12 of 54 participants, 95% CI 12–36] vs 28% [five of 18 participants, 10–54]), and erythema (13% [seven of 54 participants, 5–25] vs 39% [seven of 18 participants, 17–64]), with headache (32% [17 of 54 participants, 20–46] vs 44% [eight of 18 participants, 22–69]) and malaise (26% [14 of 54 participants, 15–40] vs 33% [six of 18 participants, 13–59]) as the most frequently reported solicited systemic reactions. One grade 3 solicited reaction (erythema) reported in the YF-VAX group resolved spontaneously. No serious unsolicited adverse events or deaths were reported. Viraemia was transiently detected in 50 participants between D4 and D10 in all groups and was observed in more participants or for a longer time in the vYF 6 Log CCID50 and YF-VAX groups. All yellow fever-naive vaccine recipients across the study groups seroconverted yielding four-fold increase from baseline in yellow fever NAb titres measured by yellow fever microneutralisation assay by D28 and were seroprotected with yellow fever NAb titres of at least 10 [1/dil]). Overall, 100% (18 of 18 participants, 95% CI 82–100), 89% (16 participants, 65–99), 100% (18 participants, 82–100), and 94% (17 participants, 73–100) of participants in the vYF 4 Log, vYF 5 Log, vYF 6 Log CCID50 groups, and YF-VAX group, respectively, remained seroprotected through D180.

Interpretation

vYF has a similar safety and immunogenicity profile to YF-VAX. In general, the vYF 5 Log CCID50 dose appeared to show optimal viraemia, safety, and immunogenicity, and was chosen for subsequent development.

Funding

Sanofi.

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Vol 24 - N° 12

P. 1393-1402 - décembre 2024 Retour au numéro
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  • Jonne Terstappen, Sarah F Hak, Anant Bhan, Debby Bogaert, Louis J Bont, Ursula J Buchholz, Andrew D Clark, Cheryl Cohen, Ron Dagan, Daniel R Feikin, Barney S Graham, Anuradha Gupta, Pradeep Haldar, Rose Jalang’o, Ruth A Karron, Leyla Kragten, You Li, Yvette N Löwensteyn, Patrick K Munywoki, Rosemary Njogu, Ab Osterhaus, Andrew J Pollard, Luiza Reali Nazario, Charles Sande, Ashish R Satav, Padmini Srikantiah, Renato T Stein, Naveen Thacker, Rachael Thomas, Marta Tufet Bayona, Natalie I Mazur

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