Nature Communications (Jun 2023)

Safety and immunogenicity of a phase 1/2 randomized clinical trial of a quadrivalent, mRNA-based seasonal influenza vaccine (mRNA-1010) in healthy adults: interim analysis

  • Ivan T. Lee,
  • Raffael Nachbagauer,
  • David Ensz,
  • Howard Schwartz,
  • Lizbeth Carmona,
  • Kristi Schaefers,
  • Andrei Avanesov,
  • Daniel Stadlbauer,
  • Carole Henry,
  • Ren Chen,
  • Wenmei Huang,
  • Daniela Ramirez Schrempp,
  • Jintanat Ananworanich,
  • Robert Paris

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-39376-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Despite vaccine availability, influenza remains a substantial global public health concern. Here, we report interim findings on the primary and secondary objectives of the safety, reactogenicity, and humoral immunogenicity of a quadrivalent messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccine against seasonal influenza, mRNA-1010, from the first 2 parts of a 3-part, first-in-human, phase 1/2 clinical trial in healthy adults aged ≥18 years (NCT04956575). In the placebo-controlled Part 1, a single dose of mRNA-1010 (50 µg, 100 µg, or 200 µg) elicited hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) titers against vaccine-matched strains. In the active-comparator-controlled Part 2, mRNA-1010 (25 µg, 50 µg, or 100 µg) elicited higher HAI titers than a standard dose, inactivated seasonal influenza vaccine for influenza A strains and comparable HAI titers for influenza B strains. No safety concerns were identified; solicited adverse reactions were dose-dependent and more frequent after receipt of mRNA-1010 than the active comparator. These interim data support continued development of mRNA-1010.