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Clinical and Vaccine Immunology, July 2006, p. 797-801, Vol. 13, No. 7
1071-412X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CVI.00038-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Institute of Environmental Science and Research (ESR), Porirua, New Zealand,1 New Zealand Ministry of Health, Wellington, New Zealand,2 Chiron Vaccines, Siena, Italy3
Received 29 January 2006/ Returned for modification 7 March 2006/ Accepted 4 May 2006
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The primary immunogenicity outcome measure for all trials was the induction of a serum bactericidal antibody (SBAb) response against Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B strain NZ98/254 (vaccine strain) using a validated serum bactericidal assay (7, 14). The requirement to achieve a titer of
1:8 for a seroresponse was based on the finding that serum antibody titer results below 1:4 lacked reproducibility and had a high coefficient of variation (7). Titrations of sera started at 1:2, and all sera with <50% killing at a 1:4 dilution were assigned a titer of 1:2, requiring the postvaccination serum to reach a minimum titer of 1:8 to achieve a fourfold rise (seroresponse) in SBAb (7). The secondary outcome measurement was a rise in total immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies measured using vesicles from the vaccine strain for antibody capture in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The vaccine trials demonstrated that >70% of older infants, toddlers, and schoolchildren attained a fourfold SBAb rise in titer from their baseline and more than 90% achieved a SBAb titer of
4 against the vaccine strain NZ98/254 (14). A lower SBAb seroresponse rate (titer of
8) postvaccination of 53% (95% confidence interval [CI], 46 to 59%) and a rate with a titer of
4 of 76% (95% CI, 70 to 81%) were achieved with the young infants. However, within 6 weeks of a fourth dose of vaccine administered at 10 to 11 months of age, the SBAb antibody levels had increased and 69% (95% CI, 53 to 82%) of young infants had titers of
1:8. Demonstration of vaccine safety and acceptable seroresponse rates led to licensure of MeNZB in July 2004 for delivery to all those under 20 years of age in New Zealand (13, 14). A fourth dose of vaccine administered to a subset of 40 young infant trial subjects showed a safety profile similar to that of the primary vaccination schedule (unpublished data).
Following the initial dose of a vaccine, IgM usually precedes IgG antibody formation, although with subsequent vaccine doses, the IgG response is greater. The secondary response differs from the initial antigen priming in that the antibody binds more strongly, described as having a higher affinity (avidity) for the immunizing antigen (18). Variables determining the secondary response include the nature of the antigen and the time between primary and subsequent immunizations. To examine the characteristics of the immune responses to MeNZB in both the young and older infants, subsets of sera were used to determine IgG isotype distribution, antibody avidity postvaccination, the decay of antibodies following vaccination, and the impact of a fourth dose of vaccine on antibody levels.
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IgG isotype determination. IgG isotype responses were measured in 100 vaccinees from the 260 young infants involved in the trial and in 100 vaccinees from the 233 older infants involved in the trial. Included in the 100-young-infant test group was the subset of 50 infants who had been given a fourth dose of vaccine 4 months after the primary vaccine schedule. Sera collected from these 50 infants prior to and 4 to 6 weeks following this fourth vaccination dose were also tested. The remaining 50 subjects were selected at random from those showing some IgG response to the vaccine outer membrane vesicle (OMV), but inclusion was based on there being sufficient serum available for the testing. With the older infant study, the 40 infants who had had a follow-up bleed 4 months after completion of the primary vaccination series were included. The remaining 60 infant sera were selected as described for the young infant trial.
NUNC-maxisorp (catalog no. 430341) 96-well microtiter plates were coated with 50 µl of the 4-µg/ml OMV preparation of strain NZ98/254 (vaccine strain) and held at 4°C for 48 h. PBS-Tw (phosphate-buffered saline [PBS], pH 7.4, containing 0.05% Tween 20) was used for all washing steps. Immediately prior to use, plates were washed and then blocked for 60 min at 37°C using 100 µl of PBS-Tw containing 1% skim milk powder (PBS-Tw-Sk)/well. Each serum sample was diluted (1:200) in PBS-Tw-Sk in duplicate, and 50 µl of each sample was added to the appropriate wells of a microtiter plate. Multiple serum samples for each individual were measured in the same assay. Strongly positive, weakly positive, and negative control serum samples obtained from adults were included on every test plate. Plates were incubated for 90 min at 37°C before being washed three times prior to the addition of 50 µl mouse anti-human IgG isotypes at dilutions shown by prior testing to give an optical density (OD) of 1.0 (Sigma I9388 clone HP6001 for IgG1, Sigma I9513 clone HP6002 for IgG2, Sigma I7260 clone HP6050 for IgG3, and Sigma I5885 clone GG5 for total IgG) to the appropriate wells. Following incubation (90 min, 37°C), the plates were washed, incubated with 50 µl goat anti-mouse IgG peroxidase conjugate (Sigma A0168) for 90 min at 37°C, and then washed again. TMB (3,3',5,5' tetramethylbenzidine) substrate (50 µl) was then added, and the reaction was stopped after 15 min with 50 µl of 2.5 M H2SO4 per well. Plates were read with a Labsystems Multiskan Ascent plate reader at 450 nm, with a reference wavelength of 540 nm. IgG indirect ELISA antibody unit values (ELISA units) were obtained by determining the mean OD value of the duplicate test samples tested at a 1:200 dilution. To adjust for interplate variation, a correction factor was applied to each result. This was calculated as the average OD for the positive control serum measured on all plates tested at the same time divided by the average OD for the positive control serum in that test plate. For acceptability of a test, the intra-assay variability of the control sera was required to be <5% and the interassay variability was required to be <15%. The standard deviation and coefficient of variation for reference sera in each set of assays were monitored using a Shewhart chart. Duplicate tests for each serum sample were required to have a variance of <0.5.
AI determination. For avidity index (AI) testing, sera available from the subset of 50 young infants and 40 older infants, as described for IgG isotype testing, were used. Measurement of antibody avidity involves the use of chaotropic agents, such as ammonium sulfate, sodium thiocyanate, or urea, that cause dissociation of antibody-antigen complexes that have low avidity, leaving intact those complexes with high avidity (10). The optimal assay conditions for measuring the AI were initially determined using different concentrations of sodium thiocyanate (NaSCN), ranging from 0 to 3 M with a range of sera. A 1.5 M solution gave good discrimination. This concentration was used in the assays reported. For testing, NUNC maxisorp plates were coated with 50 µl of a 4-µg/ml OMV preparation and blocked as for IgG testing. Starting at a dilution of 1:100, duplicate samples of each serum were diluted in serial twofold dilutions in PBS-Tw-Sk in each of two microtiter plates. Each plate also contained duplicate 1:200 dilutions of strongly positive, weakly positive, and negative control serum samples. Following incubation (90 min, 37°C), plates were washed (three times) with PBS-Tw. To one set of duplicated plates, 50 µl of a 1.5 M NaSCN solution in PBS was added to every well. PBS alone was added to the wells of the other plate. All plates were held at room temperature (15 min) before being washed with PBS-Tw (three times) and incubated (60 min, 37°C) with 50 µl rabbit anti-human IgG conjugated with horseradish peroxidase conjugate. The plates were washed again, and 50 µl of TMB substrate was added. The reaction was allowed to proceed for 15 min before being stopped by the addition of 50 µl of 2.5 M H2SO4 to each well. The plates were read with a Labsystems Multiskan Ascent plate reader at 450 nm, with a reference wavelength of 540 nm. Total IgG antibody unit values were obtained by determining the dilutions that yielded 50% of the maximal optical density for the same serum sample without NaSCN. Samples with antibody unit values beyond the assay's detection limit were retested starting at a higher dilution. The AI was calculated as the percentage of antibodies in a serum sample that remained bound after treatment with sodium thiocyanate and was calculated as follows: AI = (unit value with NaSCN)/(unit value without NaSCN) x 100 (20). Interplate variation with sera analyzed in triplicate in independent assays was monitored using control sera.
Statistical analyses.
Mean IgG isotype unit values were compared using nonparametric rather than parametric analyses, since IgG values are not normally distributed. Mean avidity percentages were compared using repeated measures of analysis of variance. Spearman's rho (
) correlation analysis was conducted to assess linear associations among SBAb, AI, and ELISA unit values. Correlations were classified as weak, modest, or strong if the coefficients were from 0 to 0.32, 0.33 to 0.65, or 0.66 to 0.1, respectively. An alpha level of 0.05 was set as the threshold for statistical significance. All analyses were performed using SPSS, version 12.5.
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8 had reduced to 14% (7/50; 95% CI, 6% to 27%) but increased to 67% (31/46; 95% CI, 52% to 80%) following the fourth vaccine dose. The geometric mean titers (GMT) pre- and postvaccination and 7 months following the third dose are given in Table 1. |
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TABLE 1. Serum bacterial antibody seroresponse rates for young infant subset
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8 (Table 2). |
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TABLE 2. Serum bacterial antibody seroresponse rates for older infant subset
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Following the primary three-dose vaccination series, the mean total IgG activity of 138.3 U, as measured at a dilution of 1:200, was significantly (P < 0.0001) higher in the older infant group than in the young infant group (117.9 U). At the same time point, the IgG isotype distribution for both groups (n = 100/group) was similar, with IgG1 unit levels being the highest, followed by much lower levels of IgG3 (Fig. 1). IgG2 levels were mostly undetected, and IgG4 levels were not measured.
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FIG. 1. Isotype distribution for IgG1 and IgG3 in the two infant age groups: 6 to 10 weeks (n = 100) and 6 to 8 months (n = 100). IgG1, bars with diagonal lines; IgG3, shaded bars. Error bars represent standard errors of the means.
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FIG. 2. Comparison of the mean AI (solid line) and the mean total IgG (dashed line) measured in young infants (n = 50). The primary three-dose vaccination series started at age 6 to 10 weeks. For the post series, serum was collected after the primary vaccination series (post-3). Prebooster serum was collected prior to delivery of the fourth dose (pre-4). Postbooster serum was collected at 4 weeks postbooster (post-4).
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4) following the primary vaccination series. Results for 10 young infant subjects who did not have SBAb titers of
4 after the primary vaccination series were not included. Following the primary vaccination series for the young infants, there was a modest linear correlation between SBAb and AI (
= 0.33; P = 0.04), but after the fourth vaccine dose, the correlation between SBAb and AI ceased to be statistically significant (
= 0.19; P = 0.26). With the older infants, there was a modest linear correlation between SBAb and AI (
= 0.447; P = 0.004) but no significant correlation between ELISA levels and AI (
= 0.234; P = 0.152).
For these same infants, there was no significant correlation between the total IgG unit levels and AI (
= 0.04; P = 0.79), and this lack of correlation remained after the fourth dose. The young infants did show a modest linear correlation between SBAb and total IgG units (
= 0.44; P = 0.005) and a weak correlation between SBAb and IgG1 responses (
= 0.315; P = 0.003), whereas the older infants showed a modest correlation between SBAb and IgG unit levels (
= 0.612; P < 0.001) and between SBAb and IgG1 levels (
= 0.609; P < 0.001).
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1:8 from a baseline of <1:4 was required (7). SBAb specific for the P1.4 VR2 epitope on the PorA protein of the epidemic strain dominated the immune responses to MeNZB in each of the age group trials (9). In the vaccine trials, the seroresponse rate (53%) following vaccination with MeNZB was lower for the young infants, but following a fourth dose, the rate was similar to that achieved by the older infants after three doses of vaccine. The seroresponse rate (76%) achieved by the older infants was comparable to that achieved by the toddlers and schoolchildren (14). A
1:4 SBAb level postvaccination occurred in 92% of toddlers. Elevation of total IgG levels in the OMV ELISA occurred in 98% of both young infants and older infants after the primary vaccination schedule. The results presented in this study represent subpopulations of the two infant trials and therefore show some differences with respect to results reported using the total trial population. T cells play an important role in the regulation of the immune response, including stimulation of B cells for antibody production. T cells are necessary for the establishment of immunological memory (avidity) and for activation of complement-mediated killing.
Of the four IgG isotypes, designated IgG1, IgG2, IgG3, and IgG4, occurring in human serum, IgG1 and IgG3 have been shown to be the most effective for complement binding and activation of complement-mediated killing of meningococci (1-3, 5, 11, 19). IgG2 is only effective at high epitope density, and IgG4 has not been shown to activate complement. In both infant groups, IgG1 was the predominant class of IgG measured following vaccination with MeNZB. The weak linear correlation (r = 0.315; P = 0.003) between postvaccination SBAb and IgG1 levels in the young infant group and a modest linear correlation in the older infant group (r = 0.609; P < 0.001) are consistent with a role of IgG1 in facilitating complement-mediated lysis of meningococci (11). Naess et al. (12) showed a similar correlation between IgG1 subclass antibody levels and SBAb levels (r = 0.62; P < 0.0001) in adults, although at a more significant level. While de Kleijn et al. (3) showed only a weak correlation between bactericidal levels and the levels of total IgG antibodies or isotype-specific levels (r = 0.2 to 0.64; P < 0.01) in toddlers immunized with the RIVM hexavalent vaccine, Vermont et al. (20) reported a strong correlation between SBAb and IgG1 levels (r = 0.83; P < 0.0001) in a study involving toddlers immunized with a P1.7-2,4 monovalent recombinant OMV vaccine (MonoMen). However, in a study of children (average age, 6.3 years) who were convalescing from meningococcal disease with B:4:P1.7-2,4, Vermont et al. (21) reported that although IgG1, followed by IgG3, dominated the IgG convalescent-phase serum response, serum bactericidal antibodies were not detected against the genetically modified strain of H44/76 expressing P1.7-2,4 PorA. The explanation for this is unclear. In another study, significantly increased levels of IgG1 and IgG3 (P < 0.001) were observed in patients 6 weeks after acute meningococcal disease (19). In that study, Sjursen and coworkers (19) reported that levels of IgG1 and IgG3 were significantly lower (P = 0.03 and 0.04, respectively) in patients admitted within 24 h of disease onset than in those admitted later. The highest levels were demonstrated 2 weeks after acute illness. These same workers also showed that following vaccination with a strain-specific OMV vaccine, the same antibody subclass pattern was induced. Only levels of total IgG and IgG1 increased significantly (P < 0.001) in the first 12 weeks postvaccination, and an increased level of IgG3 was not observed until 6 weeks after the second vaccine dose was given (P = 0.01). The levels of IgG2 and IgG4 were not shown to change with vaccination (19).
High-avidity antibodies have been shown to be superior to low-avidity antibodies for bactericidal activity, and their expression is age dependent (16). Low avidity has been reported in infants following infection with group B meningococci (15, 21). When comparing the characteristics of immune responses induced by meningococcal infection in young children with those detected in children immunized with monovalent P1.7-2,4 OMV vaccine, Vermont et al. (21) showed that the geometric mean AI in convalescent-phase sera (57%) was lower than the geometric mean AI of 73% induced by the monovalent vaccine (21). Those workers concluded that OMV vaccine may induce a better immune response than invasive meningococcal disease in young children. In an alternative study, Vermont et al. (20) reported that the RIVM monovalent OMV vaccine (MonoMen against the PorA P1.7-2,4) induced avidity maturation in toddlers and that there was a modest correlation between the serum bactericidal antibody level and the avidity index.
Our study showed that, in young infants, the AI increased a little from 51.5% postvaccination to 54.0% during the next 5 months without further vaccine doses (Fig. 2) but then increased significantly to 68.7% (P < 0.001) after a fourth dose at around 10 months of age, consistent with maturation of the antibody response (6, 17). Although higher-avidity antibodies have been shown to be more active than lower-avidity antibodies in eliciting complement-mediated bacteriolysis of meningococci, immunologic memory alone is insufficient to protect against development of disease. In the absence of circulating specific antibody, the memory response may take 4 to 7 days after exposure for an adequate antibody response to be mounted (unpublished data). Taking into account that the highest rates of disease occur in very young children (4) and that during the New Zealand trials the lowest seroconversion rates following vaccination with MeNZB occurred in young infants, the New Zealand Ministry of Health has scheduled a fourth dose of vaccine to be given to infants at 10 months of age.
We acknowledge the involvement of all members of the Vaccine Trials Teams, led by Diana Lennon, UniServices, Auckland University, who delivered the vaccine during the trials and collected the serum samples. We particularly thank Anne Glennie, Lisa McCallum, and Paul Blatchford, ESR staff who were involved with the meningococcal disease vaccine program, although not specifically with this study.
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