Safety, Tolerability, and Immunogenicity of Measles and Rubella Vaccine Delivered with a High-Density Microarray Patch: Results from a Randomized, Partially Double-Blinded, Placebo-Controlled Phase I Clinical Trial.

Ben Baker, Imogen M Bermingham, Indika Leelasena, Julian Hickling, Paul R Young, David A Muller, Angus H Forster
Author Information
  1. Ben Baker: Vaxxas Pty Ltd., Hamilton, QLD 4007, Australia. ORCID
  2. Imogen M Bermingham: Vaxxas Pty Ltd., Hamilton, QLD 4007, Australia.
  3. Indika Leelasena: University of the Sunshine Coast Clinical Trials Centre, Sippy Downs, QLD 4556, Australia.
  4. Julian Hickling: Working in Tandem Ltd., Cambridge CB1 7AB, UK. ORCID
  5. Paul R Young: School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia. ORCID
  6. David A Muller: School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia. ORCID
  7. Angus H Forster: Vaxxas Pty Ltd., Hamilton, QLD 4007, Australia.

Abstract

Microarray patches (MAPs) have the potential to be a safer, more acceptable, easier-to-use, and more cost-effective means for the administration of vaccines than injection by needle and syringe. Here, we report findings from a randomized, partially double-blinded, placebo-controlled Phase I trial using the Vaxxas high-density MAP (HD-MAP) to deliver a measles rubella (MR) vaccine. Healthy adults (N = 63, age 18-50 years) were randomly assigned 1:1:1:1 to four groups: uncoated (placebo) HD-MAPs, low-dose MR HD-MAPs (~3100 median cell-culture infectious dose [CCID] measles, ~4300 CCID rubella); high-dose MR-HD-MAPs (~9300 CCID measles, ~12,900 CCID rubella); or a sub-cutaneous (SC) injection of an approved MR vaccine, MR-Vac (≥1000 CCID per virus). The MR vaccines were stable and remained viable on HD-MAPs when stored at 2-8 °C for at least 24 months. When MR HD-MAPs stored at 2-8 °C for 24 months were transferred to 40 °C for 3 days in a controlled temperature excursion, loss of potency was minimal, and MR HD-MAPs still met World Health Organisation (WHO) specifications. MR HD-MAP vaccination was safe and well-tolerated; any systemic or local adverse events (AEs) were mild or moderate. Similar levels of binding and neutralizing antibodies to measles and rubella were induced by low-dose and high-dose MR HD-MAPs and MR-Vac. The neutralizing antibody seroconversion rates on day 28 after vaccination for the low-dose HD-MAP, high-dose HD-MAP and MR-Vac groups were 37.5%, 18.8% and 35.7%, respectively, for measles, and 37.5%, 25.0% and 35.7%, respectively, for rubella. Most participants were seropositive for measles and rubella antibodies at baseline, which appeared to negatively impact the number of participants that seroconverted to vaccines delivered by either route. The data reported here suggest HD-MAPs could be a valuable means for delivering MR-vaccine to hard-to-reach populations and support further development. Clinical trial registry number: ACTRN12621000820808.

Keywords

References

J Pharm Sci. 2018 Jun;107(6):1540-1551 [PMID: 29421219]
Front Public Health. 2022 Mar 02;10:809675 [PMID: 35309224]
Lancet. 2017 Aug 12;390(10095):649-658 [PMID: 28666680]
Vaccine. 2007 Sep 28;25(39-40):6891-9 [PMID: 17764789]
Vaccine. 2014 Nov 28;32(50):6791-7 [PMID: 25446830]
Vaccine. 2019 Sep 10;37(38):5754-5761 [PMID: 30904317]
Vaccine. 2019 Sep 10;37(38):5745-5753 [PMID: 30898393]
J Infect Dis. 2021 Sep 30;224(12 Suppl 2):S420-S428 [PMID: 34590128]
Adv Ther (Weinh). 2021 Oct;4(10): [PMID: 34926791]
Vaccine. 2018 Jun 18;36(26):3779-3788 [PMID: 29779922]
Lancet Glob Health. 2022 Feb;10(2):e186-e194 [PMID: 34951973]
Vaccine. 2019 Jul 26;37(32):4435-4443 [PMID: 30890383]
J Infect Dis. 2020 Apr 27;221(10):1576-1583 [PMID: 31674648]
PLoS Med. 2020 Mar 17;17(3):e1003024 [PMID: 32181756]
J Infect Dis. 2018 Jun 5;218(1):124-132 [PMID: 29701813]
Lancet Microbe. 2022 Feb;3(2):e96-e104 [PMID: 35544051]
J Glob Health. 2021 Jan 31;11:04004 [PMID: 33692889]
Drugs R D. 2016 Dec;16(4):327-338 [PMID: 27696306]
Hum Vaccin Immunother. 2021 Aug 3;17(8):2501-2516 [PMID: 33957843]
Biologicals. 1997 Sep;25(3):323-38 [PMID: 9325001]
Curr Opin Virol. 2020 Apr;41:68-76 [PMID: 32622318]
Biomaterials. 2015 Jul;57:50-8 [PMID: 25913250]
Hum Vaccin. 2007 Mar-Apr;3(2):54-8 [PMID: 17312403]
Vaccine. 2018 Jan 11;36 Suppl 1:A35-A42 [PMID: 29307368]
Vaccine. 2021 Dec 3;39(49):7195-7207 [PMID: 34412922]
PLoS One. 2021 Jul 30;16(7):e0255282 [PMID: 34329337]
Vaccine. 2021 Dec 3;39(49):7191-7194 [PMID: 34175125]

Word Cloud

Similar Articles

Cited By