International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Apr 2024)

A phase 3 randomized study to evaluate safety and immunogenicity of 20-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in healthy Japanese infants

  • Yasunori Ishihara,
  • Mitsuru Fukazawa,
  • Shinya Enomoto,
  • Richard de Solom,
  • Masako Yamaji,
  • Mary Kline,
  • Masakazu Aizawa,
  • Yahong Peng,
  • Osamu Kogawara,
  • Peter C. Giardina,
  • Noor Tamimi,
  • William C. Gruber,
  • Wendy Watson

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 141
p. 106942

Abstract

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Objectives: Safety and immunogenicity evaluation of a 4-dose series with 20-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV20). Methods: This phase 3, double-blind study randomized healthy Japanese infants to receive 4 doses (3 infant doses, 1 toddler dose) of PCV20 by subcutaneous (SC) or intramuscular (IM) injection or 13-valent PCV (PCV13) SC. A primary immunogenicity objective was to demonstrate noninferiority of PCV20 SC to PCV13 SC for percentages of participants meeting predefined serotype-specific immunoglobulin G concentrations 1 month after Dose 3. The 7 additional PCV20 serotypes were compared with the lowest vaccine serotype result in the PCV13 group. Safety and tolerability were assessed as the primary safety objective. Results: Overall, 668 participants were randomized (PCV20 SC, n = 226; PCV13 SC, n = 224; PCV20 IM, n = 218). The primary noninferiority objective for PCV20 SC to PCV13 SC was met for 11/13 matched and 5/7 additional serotypes. Additional data showed PCV20 SC and IM elicited robust functional opsonophagocytic activity and boosting responses to all 20 vaccine serotypes. PCV20 had a similar safety/tolerability profile to PCV13, although local reactions were less frequent with PCV20 IM. Conclusions: A 4-dose series of PCV20 SC or IM elicited immune responses expected to be protective against all 20 serotypes in Japanese infants. NCT04530838

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