Safety and immunogenicity of an anti-Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus DNA vaccine: a phase 1, open-label, single-arm, dose-escalation trial

被引:237
作者
Modjarrad, Kayvon [1 ]
Roberts, Christine C. [3 ]
Mills, Kristin T. [2 ]
Castellano, Amy R. [4 ]
Paolino, Kristopher [1 ]
Muthumani, Kar [5 ]
Reuschel, Emma L. [5 ]
Robb, Merlin L. [4 ]
Racine, Trina [6 ]
Oh, Myoung-don [7 ]
lamarre, Claude [6 ]
Zaidi, Faraz I. [5 ]
Boyer, Jean [8 ]
Kudchodkar, Sagar B. [3 ]
Jeong, Moonsup [3 ]
Darden, Janice M. [4 ]
Park, Young K. [3 ]
Scott, Paul T. [1 ]
Remigio, Celine [3 ]
Parikh, Ajay P. [4 ]
Wise, Megan C. [8 ]
Patel, Ami [5 ]
Duperret, Elizabeth K. [5 ]
Kim, Kevin Y. [5 ]
Choi, Hyeree [5 ]
White, Scott [8 ]
Bagarazzi, Mark [8 ]
May, Jeanine M. [9 ]
Kane, Deborah [3 ]
Lee, Hyojin [3 ]
Kobinger, Gary [6 ]
Michael, Nelson L. [1 ]
Weiner, David B. [5 ]
Thomas, Stephen J. [1 ]
Maslow, Joel N. [3 ]
机构
[1] Walter Reed Army Inst Res, Silver Spring, MD USA
[2] ICON Clin Res Management, Gaithersburg, MD USA
[3] GeneOne Life Sci, Seoul, South Korea
[4] Henry M Jackson Fdn Adv Mil Med, Bethesda, MD USA
[5] Wistar Inst Anat & Biol, 3601 Spruce St, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[6] Univ Laval, Quebec City, PQ, Canada
[7] Seoul Natl Univ, Coll Med, Seoul, South Korea
[8] Inovio Pharmaceut, Plymouth Meeting, PA USA
[9] Emmes Corp, Rockville, MD USA
关键词
SPIKE PROTEIN; EFFICACY; ANTIBODIES; RESPONSES;
D O I
10.1016/S1473-3099(19)30266-X
中图分类号
R51 [传染病];
学科分类号
100201 [内科学];
摘要
Background Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) coronavirus causes a highly fatal lower-respiratory tract infection. There are as yet no licensed MERS vaccines or therapeutics. This study (WRAIR-2274) assessed the safety, tolerability, and immunogenicity of the GLS-5300 MERS coronavirus DNA vaccine in healthy adults. Methods This study was a phase 1, open-label, single-arm, dose-escalation study of GLS-5300 done at the Walter Reed Army Institute for Research Clinical Trials Center (Silver Spring, MD, USA). We enrolled healthy adults aged 18-50 years; exclusion criteria included previous infection or treatment of MERS. Eligible participants were enrolled sequentially using a dose-escalation protocol to receive 0.67 mg, 2 mg, or 6 mg GLS-5300 administered by trained clinical site staff via a single intramuscular 1 mL injection at each vaccination at baseline, week 4, and week 12 followed immediately by co-localised intramuscular electroporation. Enrolment into the higher dose groups occurred after a safety monitoring committee reviewed the data following vaccination of the first five participants at the previous lower dose in each group. The primary outcome of the study was safety, assessed in all participants who received at least one study treatment and for whom post-dose study data were available, during the vaccination period with follow-up through to 48 weeks after dose 3. Safety was measured by the incidence of adverse events; administration site reactions and pain; and changes in safety laboratory parameters. The secondary outcome was immunogenicity. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (number NCT 02670187) and is completed. Findings Between Feb 17 and July 22,2016, we enrolled 75 individuals and allocated 25 each to 0.67 mg, 2 mg, or 6 mg GLS-5300. No vaccine-associated serious adverse events were reported. The most common adverse events were injection-site reactions, reported in 70 participants (93%) of 75. Overall, 73 participants (97%) of 75 reported at least one solicited adverse event; the most common systemic symptoms were headache (five [20%] with 0.67 mg, 11 [44%] with 2 mg, and seven 128%1 with 6 mg), and malaise or fatigue (five [20%] with 0.67 mg, seven [28%] with 2 mg, and two [8%] with 6 mg). The most common local solicited symptoms were administration site pain (23 [92%] with all three doses) and tenderness (21 [84%] with all three doses). Most solicited symptoms were reported as mild (19 [76%] with 0.67 mg, 20[80%]with 2 mg, and 17 [68%] with 6 mg) and were self-limiting. Unsolicited symptoms were reported for 56 participants (75%) of 75 and were deemed treatment-related for 26 (35%). The most common unsolicited adverse events were infections, occurring in 27 participants (36%); six (8%) were deemed possibly related to study treatment. There were no laboratory abnormalities of grade 3 or higher that were related to study treatment; laboratory abnormalities were uncommon, except for 15 increases in creatine phosphokinase in 14 participants (three participants in the 0.67 mg group, three in the 2 mg group, and seven in the 6 mg group). Of these 15 increases, five (33%) were deemed possibly related to study treatment (one in the 2 mg group and four in the 6 mg group). Seroconversion measured by S1-ELISA occurred in 59 (86%) of 69 participants and 61 (94%) of 65 participants after two and three vaccinations, respectively. Neutralising antibodies were detected in 34 (50%) of 68 participants. T-cell responses were detected in 47 (71%) of 66 participants after two vaccinations and in 44 (76%) of 58 participants after three vaccinations. There were no differences in immune responses between dose groups after 6 weeks. At week 60, vaccine-induced humoral and cellular responses were detected in 51 (77%) of 66 participants and 42 (64%) of 66, respectively. Interpretation The GLS-5300 MERS coronavirus vaccine was well tolerated with no vaccine-associated serious adverse events. Immune responses were dose-independent, detected in more than 85% of participants after two vaccinations, and durable through 1 year of follow-up. The data support further development of the GLS-5300 vaccine, including additional studies to test the efficacy of GLS-5300 in a region endemic for MERS coronavirus. Copyright (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1013 / 1022
页数:10
相关论文
共 25 条
[1]
An Atypical Case of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome in a Returning Traveler to Korea from Kuwait, 2018 [J].
Bak, Song Lee ;
Jun, Kang Il ;
Jung, Jongtak ;
Kim, Jeong-Han ;
Kang, Chang Kyung ;
Park, Wan Beom ;
Kim, Nam-Joong ;
Oh, Myoung-don .
JOURNAL OF KOREAN MEDICAL SCIENCE, 2018, 33 (53)
[2]
Live-attenuated bivalent measles virus-derived vaccines targeting Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus induce robust and multifunctional T cell responses against both viruses in an appropriate mouse model [J].
Bodmer, Bianca S. ;
Fiedler, Anna H. ;
Hanauer, Jan R. H. ;
Pruefer, Steffen ;
Muehlebach, Michael D. .
VIROLOGY, 2018, 521 :99-107
[3]
MERS-CoV Antibody Responses 1 Year after Symptom Onset, South Korea, 2015 [J].
Choe, Pyoeng Gyun ;
Perera, R. A. P. M. ;
Park, Wan Beom ;
Song, Kyoung-Ho ;
Bang, Ji Hwan ;
Kim, Eu Suk ;
Kim, Hong Bin ;
Ko, Long Wei Ronald ;
Park, Sang Won ;
Kim, Nam-Joong ;
Lau, Eric H. Y. ;
Poon, Leo L. M. ;
Peiris, Malik ;
Oh, Myoung-don .
EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2017, 23 (07) :1079-1084
[4]
MERS-CoV spike nanoparticles protect mice from MERS-CoV infection [J].
Coleman, Christopher M. ;
Venkataraman, Thiagarajan ;
Liu, Ye V. ;
Glenn, Gregory M. ;
Smith, Gale E. ;
Flyer, David C. ;
Frieman, Matthew B. .
VACCINE, 2017, 35 (12) :1586-1589
[5]
Corman VM, 2012, EUROSURVEILLANCE, V17, P3
[6]
Viral Shedding and Antibody Response in 37 Patients With Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Infection [J].
Corman, Victor M. ;
Albarrak, Ali M. ;
Omrani, Ali Senosi ;
Albarrak, Mohammed M. ;
Farah, Mohamed Elamin ;
Almasri, Malak ;
Muth, Doreen ;
Sieberg, Andrea ;
Meyer, Benjamin ;
Assiri, Abdullah M. ;
Binger, Tabea ;
Steinhagen, Katja ;
Lattwein, Erik ;
Al-Tawfiq, Jaffar ;
Mueller, Marcel A. ;
Drosten, Christian ;
Memish, Ziad A. .
CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2016, 62 (04) :477-483
[7]
Tolerability of intramuscular and intradermal delivery by CELLECTRA® adaptive constant current electroporation device in healthy volunteers [J].
Diehl, Malissa C. ;
Lee, Jessica C. ;
Daniels, Stephen E. ;
Tebas, Pablo ;
Khan, Amir S. ;
Giffear, Mary ;
Sardesai, Niranjan Y. ;
Bagarazzi, Mark L. .
HUMAN VACCINES & IMMUNOTHERAPEUTICS, 2013, 9 (10) :2246-2252
[8]
An orthopoxvirus-based vaccine reduces virus excretion after MERS-CoV infection in dromedary camels [J].
Haagmans, Bart L. ;
van den Brand, Judith M. A. ;
Raj, V. Stalin ;
Volz, Asisa ;
Wohlsein, Peter ;
Smits, Saskia L. ;
Schipper, Debby ;
Bestebroer, Theo M. ;
Okba, Nisreen ;
Fux, Robert ;
Bensaid, Albert ;
Foz, David Solanes ;
Kuiken, Thijs ;
Baumgaertner, Wolfgang ;
Segales, Joaquim ;
Sutter, Gerd ;
Osterhaus, Albert D. M. E. .
SCIENCE, 2016, 351 (6268) :77-81
[9]
Human polyclonal immunoglobulin G from transchromosomic bovines inhibits MERS-CoV in vivo [J].
Luke, Thomas ;
Wu, Hua ;
Zhao, Jincun ;
Channappanavar, Rudragouda ;
Coleman, Christopher M. ;
Jiao, Jin-An ;
Matsushita, Hiroaki ;
Liu, Ye ;
Postnikova, Elena N. ;
Ork, Britini L. ;
Glenn, Gregory ;
Flyer, David ;
Defang, Gabriel ;
Raviprakash, Kanakatte ;
Kochel, Tadeusz ;
Wang, Jonathan ;
Nie, Wensheng ;
Smith, Gale ;
Hensley, Lisa E. ;
Olinger, Gene G. ;
Kuhn, Jens H. ;
Holbrook, Michael R. ;
Johnson, Reed F. ;
Perlman, Stanley ;
Sullivan, Eddie ;
Frieman, Matthew B. .
SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE, 2016, 8 (326)
[10]
A Highly Immunogenic and Protective Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Vaccine Based on a Recombinant Measles Virus Vaccine Platform [J].
Malczyk, Anna H. ;
Kupke, Alexandra ;
Pruefer, Steffen ;
Scheuplein, Vivian A. ;
Hutzler, Stefan ;
Kreuz, Dorothea ;
Beissert, Tim ;
Bauer, Stefanie ;
Hubich-Rau, Stefanie ;
Tondera, Christiane ;
Eldin, Hosam Shams ;
Schmidt, Joerg ;
Vergara-Alert, Julia ;
Suezer, Yasemin ;
Seifried, Janna ;
Hanschmann, Kay-Martin ;
Kalinke, Ulrich ;
Herold, Susanne ;
Sahin, Ugur ;
Cichutek, Klaus ;
Waibler, Zoe ;
Eickmann, Markus ;
Becker, Stephan ;
Muehlebach, Michael D. .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2015, 89 (22) :11654-11667