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M2-Deficient Single-Replication Influenza Vaccine–Induced Immune Responses Associated With Protection Against Human Challenge With Highly Drifted H3N2 Influenza Strain

Joseph E. Eiden, Bram Volckaert, Oleg Rudenko, Roger Aitchison, Renee Herber, Robert B. Belshe, Harry B. Greenberg, Kathleen Coelingh, David Marshall, Yoshihiro Kawaoka, Gabriele Neumann, Pamuk Bilsel

2021The Journal of Infectious Diseases25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Current influenza vaccines are strain specific and demonstrate low vaccine efficacy against H3N2 influenza disease, especially when vaccine is mismatched to circulating virus. The novel influenza vaccine candidate, M2-deficient single replication (M2SR), induces a broad, multi-effector immune response. METHODS: A phase 2 challenge study was conducted to assess the efficacy of an M2SR vaccine expressing hemagglutinin and neuraminidase from A/Brisbane/10/2007 (Bris2007 M2SR H3N2; clade 1). Four weeks after vaccination, recipients were challenged with antigenically distinct H3N2 virus (A/Belgium/4217/2015, clade 3C.3b) and assessed for infection and clinical symptoms. RESULTS: Adverse events after vaccination were mild and similar in frequency for placebo and M2SR recipients. A single dose of Bris2007 M2SR induced neutralizing antibody to the vaccine (48% of recipients) and challenge strain (27% of recipients). Overall, 54% of M2SR recipients were infected after challenge, compared with 71% of placebo recipients. The subset of M2SR recipients with a vaccine-induced microneutralization response against the challenge virus had reduced rates of infection after challenge (38% vs 71% of placebo recipients; P = .050) and reduced illness. CONCLUSIONS: Study participants with vaccine-induced neutralizing antibodies were protected against infection and illness after challenge with an antigenically distinct virus. This is the first demonstration of vaccine-induced protection against a highly drifted H3N2 challenge virus.

Topics & Concepts

VirologyVaccinationInfluenza vaccineMedicineVirusHemagglutinin (influenza)ImmunologyInfluenza A virusVaccine efficacyNeuraminidaseImmune systemInfluenza Virus Research StudiesRespiratory viral infections researchSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research
M2-Deficient Single-Replication Influenza Vaccine–Induced Immune Responses Associated With Protection Against Human Challenge With Highly Drifted H3N2 Influenza Strain | Litcius