Summary of study
A multi-country randomized, placebo-controlled trial of the safety, immunogenicity and
efficacy of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) F-protein nanoparticle vaccine was
undertaken in 4,636 pregnant women and their infants. RSV F-protein vaccine was safe and
immunogenic in the pregnant women inducing anti-F IgG, palivizumab-competing antibodies
and RSV neutralizing antibodies that were transferred to the fetus. Although the primary
endpoint of prevention of RSV-specific medically-significant lower respiratory tract
infection (MS-LRTI) was not met per protocol criteria for efficacy (i.e. 97.52% lower
bound >30%), vaccine efficacy was 39.4% (97.52% CI: -1.0, 63.7%; p=0.0278) in
infants 0-90 days age. Furthermore, there was a 58.8% (95% CI 31.9, 75.0%) lower rate of
RSV LRTI with severe hypoxemia (secondary endpoint) through to 90 days of age in the
expanded intent-to-treat analysis. The number of women needed to be vaccinated to
prevent RSV-specific MS-LRTI or LRTI with severe hypoxemia in their infants through to
180 days of life were 88 and 82, respectively.
Background
RSV is the dominant cause of severe lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) in
infants, with most severe disease concentrated in younger-age infants.
Methods
Healthy, pregnant women between 28 and 36 weeks gestation, with expected delivery near
the start of the RSV season, were randomized to a single intramuscular dose of
nanoparticle RSV F-protein vaccine, or placebo in a 2:1 ratio. Their infants were
followed for 180 days for medically-significant LRTI (MS-LRTI), LRTI with severe
hypoxemia and/or LRTI- hospitalization. RSV detection was performed centrally by PCR.
Safety evaluation continued until 364 days age.
Results
4,636 women were randomized, with 4,579 live births. Over the first 90 days of life,
efficacy against RSV-MS-LRTI was 39.4% (97.52%CI: -1.0, 63.7%; p=0.0278) and 41.4%
(95%CI: 5.3, 61.2%) in the per protocol and expanded intent-to-treat (eITT) analyses,
respectively. There was a lower rate (efficacy 58.8%; 95%CI 31.9, 75.0% in eITT
analysis; not adjusted for multiplicity) of RSV-LRTI with severe hypoxemia in infants of
vaccinees through 90 days age. Pneumonia reported as a serious adverse events was 49.4%
less common in infants of vaccinees (2.6%) than placebo-recipients through 364 days
age.
Conclusions
Maternal vaccination with RSV F-nanoparticle vaccine was safe and immunogenic. The
prespecified primary endpoint success criterion (efficacy 97.5% lower bound ≥30%)
was not achieved. However, maternal immunization was associated with reduced risk of
RSV-confirmed MS-LRTI and LRTI with severe hypoxemia in early infancy.
Trial Registration Number
ClinicalTrials.Gov: NCT02624947.
Funding statement
Funded by Novavax, with supporting grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation.