Long-term immunogenicity and safety of the hepatitis B vaccine HepB-CpG (HEPLISAV-B) compared with HepB-Eng (Engerix-B) in adults with chronic kidney disease

•Long-term follow-up assessed persistence of antibodies to HBsAg in CKD participants.•Anti-HBs ≥ 100mIU/mL persisted for longer in HepB-CpG than HepB-Eng groups.•Anti-HBs in HepB-CpG group was significantly higher than HepB-Eng group over time.•The safety profiles were similar between HepB-CpG and H...

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Veröffentlicht in:Vaccine 2023-05, Vol.41 (20), p.3224-3232
Hauptverfasser: Girndt, Matthias, Houser, Patricia, Manllo-Karim, Roberto, Ervin, John E., Charytan, Chaim, Chow, Stephen, Symonian-Silver, Margarita, Lehrner, Lawrence, Linfert, Douglas, Shemin, Douglas, Michelsen, Ann, Xie, Fang, Janssen, Robert S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Long-term follow-up assessed persistence of antibodies to HBsAg in CKD participants.•Anti-HBs ≥ 100mIU/mL persisted for longer in HepB-CpG than HepB-Eng groups.•Anti-HBs in HepB-CpG group was significantly higher than HepB-Eng group over time.•The safety profiles were similar between HepB-CpG and HepB-Eng groups. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection remains a significant global burden, especially for patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) receiving hemodialysis. Three doses of HepB–CpG (HEPLISAV-B® vaccine) induced a superior immune response compared with 4 double doses of HepB–Eng (Engerix-B®) in a phase 3 trial (HBV-17) in adults with CKD. Here we report the long-term immunogenicity and safety of HepB-CpG and HepB–Eng in eligible participants of HBV-17 who enrolled in this optional 34-month follow-up trial (HBV-19). HBV-19 is a multicenter, open-label, phase 3b trial of adults with CKD who previously received a complete series of HepB-CpG or HepB-Eng in the HBV-17 trial. Participants were assigned to seroprotection categories at enrollment on the basis of their antibody response to hepatitis B surface antigen (anti-HBs) in HBV-17. The objective was to evaluate the durability of seroprotection (defined as an anti-HBs concentration ≥ 10mIU/mL) induced by HepB-CpG and HepB-Eng. Participants whose anti-HBs concentration was below 10mIU/mL received additional HepB-CpG or HepB-Eng doses. 147 participants were enrolled; 66.7 % were men, median age was 65.0 years, and 83.7 % were white. The durability of seroprotection in participants with CKD was similar in those who received HepB-CpG and those who received HepB-Eng. Antibody concentrations ≥ 100mIU/mL persisted for longer in HepB-CpG than HepB-Eng recipients, among those with anti-HBs ≥ 100mIU/mL post vaccination. The geometric mean anti-HBs concentration in the HepB-CpG group was significantly higher than in the HepB-Eng group over time (P ≤ 0.0001). The safety profiles were similar between the vaccine groups. Due to the higher antibody levels induced by HepB-CpG in participants with CKD, seroprotection against HBV may be expected to persist longer than that induced by HepB-Eng. ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01282762.
ISSN:0264-410X
1873-2518
DOI:10.1016/j.vaccine.2023.04.028