A Randomized Phase 1/2 Study of a Respiratory Syncytial Virus Prefusion F Vaccine

Department

Infectious Diseases

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Journal of Infectious Diseases

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Protection against human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) remains an unmet need potentially addressable by maternal immunization. This phase 1/2 study evaluated a bivalent prefusion F vaccine (RSVpreF) with antigens from RSV subgroups A and B. METHODS: Adults 18-49 years old (N=618) were randomized to receive placebo or 60, 120, or 240 µg RSVpreF with or without Al(OH)3. Safety and immunogenicity were evaluated. RESULTS: RSVpreF recipients more frequently reported local reactions and systemic events than placebo recipients; these were mostly mild or moderate. No vaccine-related serious adverse events occurred through 12 months postvaccination. All RSVpreF formulations induced 1-month postvaccination virus-neutralizing titers higher than those associated with protection of high-risk infants by palivizumab, the only prophylactic currently available for RSV. Geometric mean fold rises (GMFRs) across RSVpreF doses/formulations were 10.6-16.9 for RSV A and 10.3-19.8 for RSV B at 1 month postvaccination, greater than those historically elicited by postfusion F vaccines. GMFRs were 3.9-5.2 and 3.7-5.1, respectively, at 12 months postvaccination. CONCLUSIONS: RSVpreF formulations were safe, well tolerated, and induced robust neutralizing responses in adults. These findings support development of RSVpreF, which is being evaluated in a pivotal phase 3 study for maternal immunization.

First Page

1357

Last Page

1366

DOI

10.1093/infdis/jiab612

Volume

225

Issue

8

Publication Date

4-15-2022

Comments

See full list of authors at journal website.

PubMed ID

34932102

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