Safety and immunogenicity of a mosaic vaccine booster against Omicron and other SARS-CoV-2 variants: a randomized phase 2 trial

Nawal Al Kaabi(Khalifa University of Science and Technology), Yun Yang, Yu Liang(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Ke Xu(Chinese Center For Disease Control and Prevention), Xuefeng Zhang(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Yun Kang(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Yu Jin(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Jun Hou(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Jing Zhang(Chinese Center For Disease Control and Prevention), Tian Yang, Salah Eldin Hussein(Shaikh Khalifa Medical City), Mohamed Saif ElDein(Shaikh Khalifa Medical City), Ze Hua Lei(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Hao Zhang(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Shuai Shao(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Zhao Ming Liu(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Ning Liu(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Xiang Zheng(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Ji Guo Su(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Sen Yang(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Xiangfeng Cong(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Yao Tan(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Wenwen Lei(Chinese Center For Disease Control and Prevention), Xue Gao(Lanzhou Institute of Husbandry and Pharmaceutical Sciences), Zhiwei Jiang, Hui Wang(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Meng Li, Hanadi Mekki Mekki(Emirates Foundation), Walid Zaher, Sally Mahmoud, Xue Zhang(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Chang Qu, Dan Ying Liu, Jing Zhang(Chinese Center For Disease Control and Prevention), Mengjie Yang(Chinese Center For Disease Control and Prevention), Islam Eltantawy, Peng Xiao, Fu Jie Shen(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Jin Juan Wu(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Zi Bo Han(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Li Fang Du(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Fang Tang(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Shi Chen(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Zhi Jing(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Fan Zheng(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Ya Nan Hou(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Xin Yu Li(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Xin Li(National Vaccine and Serum Institute), Zhao Nian Wang, Jin Liang Yin, Xiao Yan Mao(Lanzhou Institute of Husbandry and Pharmaceutical Sciences), Jin Zhang(Chinese Center For Disease Control and Prevention), Liang Qu, Yun Tao Zhang(China National Pharmaceutical Group Corporation (China)), Xiao Ming Yang(China National Pharmaceutical Group Corporation (China)), Guizhen Wu(Chinese Center For Disease Control and Prevention), Qi Ming Li(National Vaccine and Serum Institute)
Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy
January 3, 2023
Cited by 9Open Access
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Abstract

An ongoing randomized, double-blind, controlled phase 2 trial was conducted to evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of a mosaic-type recombinant vaccine candidate, named NVSI-06-09, as a booster dose in subjects aged 18 years and older from the United Arab Emirates (UAE), who had administered two or three doses of inactivated vaccine BBIBP-CorV at least 6 months prior to enrollment. The participants were randomly assigned with 1:1 to receive a booster dose of NVSI-06-09 or BBIBP-CorV. The primary outcomes were immunogenicity and safety against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) Omicron variant, and the exploratory outcome was cross-immunogenicity against other circulating strains. Between May 25 and 30, 2022, 516 adults received booster vaccination with 260 in NVSI-06-09 group and 256 in BBIBP-CorV group. Interim results showed a similar safety profile between two booster groups, with low incidence of adverse reactions of grade 1 or 2. For immunogenicity, by day 14 post-booster, the fold rises in neutralizing antibody geometric mean titers (GMTs) from baseline elicited by NVSI-06-09 were remarkably higher than those by BBIBP-CorV against the prototype strain (19.67 vs 4.47-fold), Omicron BA.1.1 (42.35 vs 3.78-fold), BA.2 (25.09 vs 2.91-fold), BA.4 (22.42 vs 2.69-fold), and BA.5 variants (27.06 vs 4.73-fold). Similarly, the neutralizing GMTs boosted by NVSI-06-09 against Beta and Delta variants were also 6.60-fold and 7.17-fold higher than those by BBIBP-CorV. Our findings indicated that a booster dose of NVSI-06-09 was well-tolerated and elicited broad-spectrum neutralizing responses against divergent SARS-CoV-2 variants, including Omicron and its sub-lineages.


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