Abstract

A pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) has been developed consisting of capsular polysaccharide (Ps) coupled to the outer membrane protein complex of Neiserria meningitidis serogroup B. Experiments were conducted in infant rhesus monkeys to assess the potential to administer multiple Pn types in a single vaccine. A single type conjugate, 6B, was dosed from 0.025 to 25 μg Ps. Peak anti-6B Ps Ab titers were seen at lower doses of 0.025 and 0.25 μg Ps, while reduced titers of anti-6B Ps Ab were observed at the highest doses of conjugate administered, 2.5 and 25 μg Ps. By mixing free Ps, carrier, or another monovalent PCV with this 6B PCV, it was determined that reduced anti-6B Ps titers at high PCV doses were associated only with the quantity of type-specific Ps in the conjugate. Thus, increasing the amount of carrier protein or adding an additional monovalent conjugate did not significantly affect the response to type 6B Ps. These results suggest that, given an appropriately determined dose per individual pneumococcal Ps type, a multivalent PCV that includes many different types should have satisfactory clinical immunogenicity.

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