AI Article Synopsis

  • A phase 2 clinical trial evaluated the safety and effectiveness of a maternal RSV vaccine (RSVPreF3) in 213 healthy pregnant women, focusing on its impact during late pregnancy and its effects on newborns.
  • The vaccine was well tolerated with no significant adverse events linked to it, demonstrating significant increases in mothers' RSV-specific neutralizing antibodies compared to a placebo.
  • Results showed successful transfer of protective antibodies to newborns, with antibody levels in infants highest at birth, supporting the vaccine's promise for maternal immunization against RSV.

Article Abstract

Background: In a phase 1/2 study, a maternal respiratory syncytial virus vaccine candidate (RSVPreF3) demonstrated an acceptable safety profile and efficiently increased RSV-specific humoral immune responses in non-pregnant women.

Methods: In this phase 2 observer-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial (NCT04126213), the safety of RSVPreF3 (60 or 120 µg), administered during late second or third trimester, was evaluated in 213 18- to 40-year-old healthy pregnant women through 6 months postdelivery and their offspring through infancy; immunogenicity was evaluated through day 43 postdelivery and day 181 postbirth, respectively.

Results: RSVPreF3 was well tolerated. No pregnancy-related or neonatal adverse events of special interest were considered vaccine/placebo related. In the 60 and 120 µg RSVPreF3 groups: (1) neutralizing antibody (nAb) titers in mothers increased 12.7- and 14.9-fold against RSV-A and 10.6- and 13.2-fold against RSV-B, respectively, 1 month postvaccination and remained 8.9-10.0-fold over prevaccination at day 43 postdelivery; (2) nAb titers were consistently higher compared to placebo recipients; (3) placental transfer ratios for anti-RSVPreF3 antibodies at birth were 1.62 and 1.90, respectively, and (4) nAb levels in infants were highest at birth and declined through day 181 postbirth.

Conclusions: RSVPreF3 maternal vaccination had an acceptable safety risk profile and induced robust RSV-specific immune responses with successful antibody transfer to their newborns.

Clinical Trials Registration: NCT04126213.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10420396PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiad024DOI Listing

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