Abstract

SummaryBackgroundTwo novel type 2 oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV2) candidates, novel OPV2-c1 and novel OPV2-c2, designed to be more genetically stable than the licensed Sabin monovalent OPV2, have been developed to respond to ongoing polio outbreaks due to circulating vaccine-derived type 2 polioviruses.MethodsWe did two randomised studies at two centres in Belgium. The first was a phase 4 historical control study of monovalent OPV2 in Antwerp, done before global withdrawal of OPV2, and the second was a phase 2 study in Antwerp and Ghent with novel OPV2-c1 and novel OPV2-c2. Eligible participants were healthy adults aged 18–50 years with documented history of at least three polio vaccinations, including OPV in the phase 4 study and either OPV or inactivated poliovirus vaccine (IPV) in the novel OPV2 phase 2 study, with no dose within 12 months of study start. In the historical control trial, participants were randomly assigned to either one dose or two doses of monovalent OPV2. In the novel OPV2 trial, participants with previous OPV vaccinations were randomly assigned to either one or two doses of novel OPV2-c1 or to one or two doses of novel OPV2-c2. IPV-vaccinated participants were randomly assigned to receive two doses of either novel OPV2-c1, novel OPV2-c2, or placebo. Vaccine administrators were unmasked to treatment; medical staff performing safety and reactogenicity assessments or blood draws for immunogenicity assessments were masked. Participants received the first vaccine dose on day 0, and a second dose on day 28 if assigned to receive a second dose. Primary objectives were assessments and comparisons of safety up to 28 days after each dose, including solicited adverse events and serious adverse events, and immunogenicity (seroprotection rates on day 28 after the first vaccine dose) between monovalent OPV2 and the two novel OPV2 candidates. Primary immunogenicity analyses were done in the per-protocol population. Safety was assessed in the total vaccinated population—ie, all participants who received at least one dose of their assigned vaccine. The phase 4 control study is registered with EudraCT (2015-003325-33) and the phase 2 novel OPV2 study is registered with EudraCT (2018-001684-22) and ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04544787).FindingsIn the historical control study, between Jan 25 and March 18, 2016, 100 volunteers were enrolled and randomly assigned to receive one or two doses of monovalent OPV2 (n=50 in each group). In the novel OPV2 study, between Oct 15, 2018, and Feb 27, 2019, 200 previously OPV-vaccinated volunteers were assigned to the four groups to receive one or two doses of novel OPV2-c1 or novel OPV2-c2 (n=50 per group); a further 50 participants, previously vaccinated with IPV, were assigned to novel OPV2-c1 (n=17), novel OPV2-c2 (n=16), or placebo (n=17). All participants received the first dose of assigned vaccine or placebo and were included in the total vaccinated population. All vaccines appeared safe; no definitely vaccine-related withdrawals or serious adverse events were reported. After first doses in previously OPV-vaccinated participants, 62 (62%) of 100 monovalent OPV2 recipients, 71 (71%) of 100 recipients of novel OPV2-c1, and 74 (74%) of 100 recipients of novel OPV2-c2 reported solicited systemic adverse events, four (monovalent OPV2), three (novel OPV2-c1), and two (novel OPV2-c2) of which were considered severe. In IPV-vaccinated participants, solicited adverse events occurred in 16 (94%) of 17 who received novel OPV2-c1 (including one severe) and 13 (81%) of 16 who received novel OPV2-c2 (including one severe), compared with 15 (88%) of 17 placebo recipients (including two severe). In previously OPV-vaccinated participants, 286 (97%) of 296 were seropositive at baseline; after one dose, 100% of novel OPV2 vaccinees and 97 (97%) of monovalent OPV2 vaccinees were seropositive.InterpretationNovel OPV2 candidates were as safe, well tolerated, and immunogenic as monovalent OPV2 in previously OPV-vaccinated and IPV-vaccinated adults. These data supported the further assessment of the vaccine candidates in children and infants.FundingUniversity of Antwerp and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Highlights

  • Global eradication of wild-type 2 and 3 polioviruses has been declared,[1] with wild-type 1 only endemic in Afghanistan and Pakistan.[2]

  • Because more than 94% of circulating vaccinederived poliovirus cases were due to type 2, initial focus was on novel type 2 oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) (OPV2s),[6] and has produced two candidates, OPV2-c1 and OPV2-c2.7,8 Both candidates are attenuated serotype 2 polioviruses derived from a modified Sabin 2 infectious clone with different com­ binations of five distinct modifications of the Sabin 2 genome, propagated in Vero cells

  • After reporting the first phase 1 study of both candidates in healthy adults,[9] we report a larger phase 2 assessment of the safety, tolerability, immunogenicity, and genetic stability of both candidates in adults vac­ cinated with OPV or inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) to support further clinical develop­ment in children and infants.[10]

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Summary

Introduction

Global eradication of wild-type 2 and 3 polioviruses has been declared,[1] with wild-type 1 only endemic in Afghanistan and Pakistan.[2]. Novel OPV2-c1 includes a genetically stabilised domain V (the primary attenua­tion site for Sabin 2), relocation of the cis-acting replication element, and modifications to the polymerase to enh­ ance fidelity and reduce recombination.[7] Novel OPV2-c2 includes the same genetically stabilised domain V and codon deoptimisation in the capsid-coding region.[8] These modifications aimed to stabilise the genetic sequence against reversion in the 5ʹ untranslated region with additional attenuation provided by introducing about 87 additional silent mutations in the capsid region

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