Safety and immunogenicity of the Euvichol-S oral cholera vaccine for prevention of Vibrio cholerae O1 infection in Nepal: an observer-blind, active-controlled, randomised, non-inferiority, phase 3 trial

In October, 2017, WHO launched a strategy to eliminate cholera by 2030. A primary challenge in meeting this goal is the limited global supply capacity of oral cholera vaccine and the worsening of cholera outbreaks since 2021. To help address the current shortage of oral cholera vaccine, a WHO prequa...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet global health 2024-05, Vol.12 (5), p.e826-e837
Hauptverfasser: Song, Katerina Rok, Chapagain, Ram Hari, Tamrakar, Dipesh, Shrestha, Rajeev, Kanodia, Piush, Chaudhary, Shipra, Wartel, T Anh, Yang, Jae Seung, Kim, Deok Ryun, Lee, Jinae, Park, Eun Lyeong, Cho, Haeun, Lee, Jiyoung, Thaisrivichai, Patchara, Vemula, Sridhar, Kim, Bo Mi, Gupta, Birendra, Saluja, Tarun, Pansuriya, Ruchir Kumar, Ganapathy, Ravi, Baik, Yeong Ok, Lee, Young Jin, Jeon, Suhi, Park, Youngran, Her, Howard L, Park, Youngshin, Lynch, Julia A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In October, 2017, WHO launched a strategy to eliminate cholera by 2030. A primary challenge in meeting this goal is the limited global supply capacity of oral cholera vaccine and the worsening of cholera outbreaks since 2021. To help address the current shortage of oral cholera vaccine, a WHO prequalified oral cholera vaccine, Euvichol-Plus was reformulated by reducing the number of components and inactivation methods. We aimed to evaluate the immunogenicity and safety of Euvichol-S (EuBiologics, Seoul, South Korea) compared with an active control vaccine, Shanchol (Sanofi Healthcare India, Telangana, India) in participants of various ages in Nepal. We did an observer-blind, active-controlled, randomised, non-inferiority, phase 3 trial at four hospitals in Nepal. Eligible participants were healthy individuals aged 1–40 years without a history of cholera vaccination. Individuals with a history of hypersensitivity reactions to other preventive vaccines, severe chronic disease, previous cholera vaccination, receipt of blood or blood-derived products in the past 3 months or other vaccine within 4 weeks before enrolment, and pregnant or lactating women were excluded. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1:1:1) by block randomisation (block sizes of two, four, six, or eight) to one of four groups (groups A–D); groups C and D were stratified by age (1–5, 6–17, and 18–40 years). Participants in groups A–C were assigned to receive two 1·5 mL doses of Euvichol-S (three different lots) and participants in group D were assigned to receive the active control vaccine, Shanchol. All participants and site staff (with the exception of those who prepared and administered the study vaccines) were masked to group assignment. The primary immunogenicity endpoint was non-inferiority of immunogenicity of Euvichol-S (group C) versus Shanchol (group D) at 2 weeks after the second vaccine dose, measured by the seroconversion rate, defined as the proportion of participants who had achieved seroconversion (defined as ≥four-fold increase in V cholerae O1 Inaba and Ogawa titres compared with baseline). The primary immunogenicity endpoint was assessed in the per-protocol analysis set, which included all participants who received all their planned vaccine administrations, had no important protocol deviations, and who provided blood samples for all immunogenicity assessments. The primary safety endpoint was the number of solicited adverse events, unsolicited adverse events, and serious a
ISSN:2214-109X
2214-109X
DOI:10.1016/S2214-109X(24)00059-7