Immunogenicity and safety of the adjuvanted recombinant zoster vaccine in chronically immunosuppressed adults following renal transplant : A phase 3, randomized clinical trial

Autor: Vink, P., Torrell, J.M.R., Fructuoso, A.S., Kim, Sung-Joo, Kim, Sang-Il, Zaltzman, J., Ortiz, F., Plana, J.M.C., Rodriguez, A.M.F., Rodrigo, H.R., Marti, M.C., Perez, R., Roncero, F.M.G., Kumar, D., Chiang, Y.-J., Doucette, K., Pipeleers, L., Morales, M.L.A., Rodriguez-Ferrero, M.L., Secchi, Antonio, McNeil, S.A., Campora, L., Di Paolo, E., El Idrissi, M., López-Fauqued, M., Salaun, B., Heineman, T.C., Oostvogels, L.
Přispěvatelé: Clinicum, HUS Abdominal Center
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
vomiting
Herpesvirus 3
Human

drug safety
myalgia
glycoprotein E
diarrhea
gastrointestinal symptom
Antibodies
Viral

Immunogenicity
Vaccine

recombinant vaccine
humoral immunity
calcineurin inhibitor
Herpes Zoster Vaccine
Herpes zoster vaccine
kidney function
fever
11832 Microbiology and virology
Vaccines
Synthetic

adult
creatinine
Burkitt lymphoma
immunosuppressive treatment
clinical trial
nausea
Immunogenicity
Renal transplant
female
priority journal
kidney graft
Varicella zoster virus
injection site erythema
mucosa inflammation
Safety
CD4 antigen
bacterial meningitis
injection site pain
mycophenolic acid
Adult
corticosteroid
side effect
kidney transplantation
herpes zoster
cellular immunity
antibody titer
Herpes Zoster
Article
virus antibody
injection site swelling
shivering
vaccine immunogenicity
varicella zoster vaccine
male
Humans
controlled study
drug fatality
human
single blind procedure
CD4+ T lymphocyte
phase 3 clinical trial
rapamycin
abdominal pain
immune deficiency
vaccination
graft recipient
major clinical study
Kidney Transplantation
febrile neutropenia
multicenter study
randomized controlled trial
placebo
fatigue
kidney graft rejection
Immunosuppression
Popis: Background. The incidence of herpes zoster is up to 9 times higher in immunosuppressed solid organ transplant recipients than in the general population. We investigated the immunogenicity and safety of an adjuvanted recombinant zoster vaccine (RZV) in renal transplant (RT) recipients ≥18 years of age receiving daily immunosuppressive therapy. Methods. In this phase 3, randomized (1:1), observer-blind, multicenter trial, RT recipients were enrolled and received 2 doses of RZV or placebo 1-2 months (M) apart 4-18M posttransplant. Anti-glycoprotein E (gE) antibody concentrations, gE-specific CD4 T-cell frequencies, and vaccine response rates were assessed at 1M post-dose 1, and 1M and 12M post-dose 2. Solicited and unsolicited adverse events (AEs) were recorded for 7 and 30 days after each dose, respectively. Solicited general symptoms and unsolicited AEs were also collected 7 days before first vaccination. Serious AEs (including biopsy-proven allograft rejections) and potential immune-mediated diseases (pIMDs) were recorded up to 12M post-dose 2. Results. Two hundred sixty-four participants (RZV: 132; placebo: 132) were enrolled between March 2014 and April 2017. gE-specific humoral and cell-mediated immune responses were higher in RZV than placebo recipients across postvaccination time points and persisted above prevaccination baseline 12M post-dose 2. Local AEs were reported more frequently by RZV than placebo recipients. Overall occurrences of renal function changes, rejections, unsolicited AEs, serious AEs, and pIMDs were similar between groups. Conclusions. RZV was immunogenic in chronically immunosuppressed RT recipients. Immunogenicity persisted through 12M postvaccination. No safety concerns arose. © The Author(s) 2019.
Databáze: OpenAIRE