Emerging Infectious Diseases (Mar 2020)

Randomized Trial of 2 Schedules of Meningococcal B Vaccine in Adolescents and Young Adults, Canada

  • Joanne M. Langley,
  • Soren Gantt,
  • Caroline Quach,
  • Julie A. Bettinger,
  • Scott A. Halperin,
  • Jill Mutch,
  • Shelly A. McNeil,
  • Brian J. Ward,
  • Donna MacKinnon-Cameron,
  • Lingyun Ye,
  • Kim Marty,
  • David Scheifele,
  • Erin Brown,
  • Joenel Alcantara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2603.190160
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 3
pp. 454 – 462

Abstract

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Emergency vaccination programs often are needed to control outbreaks of meningococcal disease caused by Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B (MenB) on college campuses. Such campaigns expend multiple campus and public health resources. We conducted a randomized, controlled, multicenter, observer-blinded trial comparing immunogenicity and tolerability of an accelerated vaccine schedule of 0 and 21 days to a longer interval of 0 and 60 days for 4-component MenB vaccine (MenB-4C) in students 17–25 years of age. At day 21 after the first MenB-4C dose, we observed protective human serum bactericidal titers >4 to MenB strains 5/99, H44/76, and NZ 98/254 in 98%–100% of participants. Geometric mean titers increased >22-fold over baseline. At day 180, >95% of participants sustained protective titers regardless of their vaccine schedule. The most common adverse event was injection site pain. An accelerated MenB-4C immunization schedule could be considered for rapid control of campus outbreaks.

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