Elsevier

Vaccine

Volume 33, Issue 39, 22 September 2015, Pages 5127-5134
Vaccine

Lot-to-lot consistency of a tetravalent dengue vaccine in healthy adults in Australia: A randomised study

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.08.008Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Lot-to-lot biological equivalence of a tetravalent dengue vaccine was established.

  • Results support the change in scaled up manufacturing process for the dengue vaccine.

  • There were no safety concerns with the tetravalent dengue vaccine within the observation period.

Abstract

Background

The recombinant yellow fever-17D-dengue virus, live, attenuated, tetravalent dengue vaccine (CYD-TDV) has undergone extensive clinical trials. Here safety and consistency of immunogenicity of phase III manufacturing lots of CYD-TDV were evaluated and compared with a phase II lot and placebo in a dengue-naïve population.

Methods

Healthy 18–60 year-olds were randomly assigned in a 3:3:3:3:1 ratio to receive three subcutaneous doses of either CYD-TDV from any one of three phase III lots or a phase II lot, or placebo, respectively in a 0, 6, 12 month dosing schedule. Neutralising antibody geometric mean titres (PRNT50 GMTs) for each of the four dengue serotypes were compared in sera collected 28 days after the third vaccination—equivalence among lots was demonstrated if the lower and upper limits of the two-sided 95% CIs of the GMT ratio were ≥0.5 and ≤2.0, respectively.

Results

712 participants received vaccine or placebo and 614 (86%) completed the study; 17 (2.4%) participants withdrew after adverse events. Equivalence of phase III lots was demonstrated for 11 of 12 pairwise comparisons. One of three comparisons for serotype 2 was not statistically equivalent. GMTs for serotype 2 in phase III lots were close to each other (65.9, 44.1 and 58.1, respectively).

Conclusions

Phase III lots can be produced in a consistent manner with predictable immune response and acceptable safety profile similar to previously characterised phase II lots. The phase III lots may be considered as not clinically different as statistical equivalence was shown for serotypes 1, 3 and 4 across the phase III lots. For serotype 2, although equivalence was not shown between two lots, the GMTs observed in the phase III lots were consistently higher than those for the phase II lot. As such, in our view, biological equivalence for all serotypes was demonstrated.

Trial registration

ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01134263

Keywords

Flavivirus
Dengue
Vaccine
Immunogenicity

Cited by (0)