AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study involved a dose-finding trial for the HilleVax bivalent vaccine (HIL-214) in children aged 6 months to 4 years across Panama and Colombia, with 120 participants per age cohort.
  • - Participants were divided into four groups receiving different vaccine formulations, and responses to the vaccine were measured at multiple intervals, showing significant antibody responses particularly after the second dose, especially in the younger cohort.
  • - The vaccine was well-tolerated with mild side effects reported, and the antibody levels remained elevated for at least 210 days post-vaccination, indicating potential for further development to protect young children from norovirus.

Article Abstract

We conducted a dose-finding phase 2 study of the HilleVax bivalent virus-like particle (VLP) vaccine candidate (HIL-214) in two cohorts of children, 6-≤12 months and 1-≤4 years of age (N = 120 per cohort), in Panama and Colombia (ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier NCT02153112). On Day 1, children randomized to one of the four equal groups received intramuscular injections of four different HIL-214 formulations containing 15/15, 15/50, 50/50, or 50/150 μg of GI.1/GII.4c genotype VLPs and 0.5 mg Al(OH). On Day 29, half the children in each group received a second vaccination (N = 60), while the other half received saline placebo injections to maintain the blind. VLP-specific ELISA Pan-Ig and histo-blood group binding antigen-blocking antibodies (HBGA) were measured on Days 1, 29, 57 and 210. On Day 29, after one dose, there were large Pan-Ig and HBGA responses in both age cohorts with some indication of dose-dependence, and higher geometric mean titers (GMT) in the older children. A further increase in titers was observed 28 days after a second dose in the 6-≤12-month-old groups, but less so in the 1-≤4-year-old groups; GMTs at Day 57 were broadly similar across doses and in both age groups. GMTs of Pan-Ig and HBGA persisted above baseline up to Day 210. All formulations were well tolerated with mostly mild-to-moderate transient solicited adverse events reported by parents/guardians, and no vaccine-related serious adverse events occurred. Further development of HIL-214 is warranted to protect the most susceptible young children against norovirus.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10294743PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21645515.2023.2204787DOI Listing

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