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Pooled safety evaluation for a new single-shot live-attenuated chikungunya vaccine

Chikungunya disease, caused by chikungunya virus (CHIKV), is associated with substantial morbidity, including debilitating CHIKV-related arthralgia. Three clinical trials of a CHIKV vaccine (VLA1553, IXCHIQ®) were conducted in the USA: a Phase 1 dose-finding trial, a pivotal Phase 3 trial and a Phas...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of travel medicine 2024-12, Vol.31 (8)
Main Authors: Maurer, Gabriele, Buerger, Vera, Larcher-Senn, Julian, Erlsbacher, Florian, Dubischar, Katrin, Eder-Lingelbach, Susanne, Jaramillo, Juan Carlos
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Chikungunya disease, caused by chikungunya virus (CHIKV), is associated with substantial morbidity, including debilitating CHIKV-related arthralgia. Three clinical trials of a CHIKV vaccine (VLA1553, IXCHIQ®) were conducted in the USA: a Phase 1 dose-finding trial, a pivotal Phase 3 trial and a Phase 3 lot-to-lot consistency trial. Participants were healthy adults (≥18 years) and received a single intramuscular dose of VLA1553 (3520 participants) or placebo (1033 participants). Solicited injection site and systemic adverse events (AEs) (10-14 days post-vaccination), unsolicited AEs (28 and 180 days post-vaccination), AEs of special interest (AESIs) (28 days post-vaccination), medically attended AEs (MAAEs), serious AEs (SAEs) (180 days post-vaccination) and pregnancies were evaluated. Safety data were pooled, and analyses were descriptive. Overall, 63.7% of participants receiving VLA1553 experienced AEs (44.7% for placebo) that were generally mild. Solicited injection-site AEs, solicited systemic AEs and unsolicited (Day 29) AEs were reported by 15.5, 50.9 and 22.7% of participants who received VLA1553 and 11.1, 26.9 and 13.4% who received placebo. Arthralgia was reported by 16.7% of participants who received VLA1553 and 4.8% of participants who received placebo; none required medical attention. MAAEs, AESIs and SAEs were reported by 12.4, 0.3 and 1.5% of participants who received VLA1553 and 11.3, 0.1 and 0.8% of participants who received placebo. Protocol-defined AESIs were mild and short-lived, and two VLA1553-related SAEs resolved without sequelae. There were no clinically important differences in AE incidence based on age or medical history and no VLA1553-related adverse pregnancy outcomes. There were three deaths (two in the VLA1553 group and one in the placebo group); none was vaccine-related. A single dose of VLA1553 presented with an excellent local tolerability profile and overall safety in line with that expected for a live-attenuated vaccine. The safety profile was comparable in participants aged 18-64 years and ≥65 years.
ISSN:1195-1982
1708-8305
1708-8305
DOI:10.1093/jtm/taae133