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Safety and immunogenicity of a prefusion non-stabilized spike protein mRNA COVID-19 vaccine: a phase I trial
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Document Title
Safety and immunogenicity of a prefusion non-stabilized spike protein mRNA COVID-19 vaccine: a phase I trial
Author
Gatechompol S, Kittanamongkolchai W, Ketloy C, Prompetchara E, Thitithanyanont A, Jongkaewwattana A, Buranapraditkun S, Alameh MG, Ubolyam S, Sophonphan J, Apornpong T, Kerr S, Kamarulzaman A, Siwamogsatham S, Kroon E, Puthanakit T, Patarakul K, Palaga T, Wijagkanalan W, Carpenter A, Hong L, Weissman D, Ruxrungtham K
Name from Authors Collection
Scopus Author ID
55199829700
Scopus Author ID
8071686900
Affiliations
Chulalongkorn University; Chulalongkorn University; Thai Red Cross Society; Chulalongkorn University; Chulalongkorn University; Chulalongkorn University; Mahidol University; National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Center Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology (BIOTEC); University of Pennsylvania; Pennsylvania Medicine; Thai Red Cross Society; Chulalongkorn University; University of New South Wales Sydney; Kirby Institute; Universiti Malaya; Chulalongkorn University; Chulalongkorn University; Chulalongkorn University
Type
Article; Early Access
Source Title
NATURE MICROBIOLOGY
Open Access
Bronze
Publisher
NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI
10.1038/s41564-022-01271-0
Format
Abstract
A phase 1 clinical trial evaluates the safety, tolerability and immunogenicity of the ChulaCov19 mRNA vaccine in healthy adults. Effective mRNA SARS-CoV-2 vaccines are available but need to be stored in freezers, limiting their use to countries that have appropriate storage capacity. ChulaCov19 is a prefusion non-stabilized SARS-CoV-2 spike-protein-encoding, nucleoside-modified mRNA, lipid nanoparticle encapsulated vaccine that we report to be stable when stored at 2-8 degrees C for up to 3 months. Here we report safety and immunogenicity data from a phase I open-label, dose escalation, first-in-human trial of the ChulaCov19 vaccine (NCT04566276). Seventy-two eligible volunteers, 36 of whom were aged 18-55 (adults) and 36 aged 56-75 (elderly), were enroled. Two doses of vaccine were administered 21 d apart at 10, 25 or 50 mu g per dose (12 per group). The primary outcome was safety and the secondary outcome was immunogenicity. All three dosages of ChulaCov19 were well tolerated and elicited robust dose-dependent and age-dependent B- and T-cell responses. Transient mild/moderate injection site pain, fever, chills, fatigue and headache were more common after the second dose. Four weeks after the second dose, in the adult cohort, MicroVNT-50 geometric mean titre against wild-type SARS-CoV-2 was 848 (95% CI, 483-1,489), 736 (459-1,183) and 1,140 (854-1,522) IU ml(-1) at 10, 25 and 50 mu g doses, respectively, versus 285 (196-413) IU ml(-1) for human convalescent sera. All dose levels elicited 100% seroconversion, with geometric mean titre ratios 4-8-fold higher than for human convalescent sera (P < 0.01), and high IFN gamma spot-forming cells per million peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The 50 mu g dose induced better cross-neutralization against Alpha, Beta, Gamma and Delta variants than lower doses. ChulaCov19 at 50 mu g is well tolerated and elicited higher neutralizing antibodies than human convalescent sera, with strong T-cell responses. These antibodies cross-neutralized four variants of concern. ChulaCov19 has proceeded to phase 2 clinical trials. We conclude that the mRNA vaccine expressing a prefusion non-stabilized spike protein is safe and highly immunogenic.
Funding Sponsor
National Vaccine Institute (NVI) [2563.1/11, 2564.1/4]; C2F Fund-Chulalongkorn Academic Advancement into Its 2nd Century Project (CUAASC); Ratchadapisek Sompoch Endowment Fund (2021), Chulalongkorn University [764002-HE04]; Faculty of Medicine, Chulalongkorn University; Thai Red Cross Society, Thailand
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WOS