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Safety and immunogenicity of a tetravalent live-attenuated dengue vaccine in flavivirus-naive infants

  • Veerachai Watanaveeradej
  • , Sriluck Simasathien
  • , Ananda Nisalak
  • , Timothy P. Endy
  • , Richard G. Jarman
  • , Bruce L. Innis
  • , Stephen J. Thomas
  • , Robert V. Gibbons
  • , Sumetha Hengprasert
  • , Rudiwilai Samakoses
  • , Angkool Kerdpanich
  • , David W. Vaughn
  • , J. Robert Putnak
  • , Kenneth H. Eckels
  • , Rafael De La Barrera
  • , Mammen P. Mammen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

57 Scopus citations

Abstract

A Phase I/II observer-blind, randomized, controlled trial evaluated the safety and immunogenicity of a dengue virus (DENV) vaccine candidate in healthy Thai infants (aged 12-15 months) without measurable pre-vaccination neutralizing antibodies to DENV and Japanese encephalitis virus. Fifty-one subjects received two doses of either DENV (N = 34; four received 1/10th dose) or control vaccine (N = 17; dose 1, live varicella; dose 2, Haemophilus influenzae type b). After each vaccine dose, adverse events (AEs) were solicited for 21 days, and non-serious AEs were solicited for 30 days; serious AEs (SAEs) were recorded throughout the study. Laboratory safety assessments were performed at 10 and 30 days; neutralizing antibodies were measured at 30 days. The DENV vaccine was well-tolerated without any related SAEs. After the second dose, 85.7% of full-dose DENV vaccinees developed at least trivalent and 53.6% developed tetravalent neutralizing antibodies ≥ 1:10 to DENV (control group = 0%). This vaccine candidate, therefore, warrants continued development in this age group (NCT00322049; clinicaltrials.gov).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)341-351
Number of pages11
JournalAmerican Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Volume85
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2011

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