Safety and immunogenicity of quadrivalent meningococcal conjugate vaccine in 2- to 10-year-old human immunodeficiency virus-infected children
- PMID: 21987006
- PMCID: PMC3252429
- DOI: 10.1097/INF.0b013e318236c67b
Safety and immunogenicity of quadrivalent meningococcal conjugate vaccine in 2- to 10-year-old human immunodeficiency virus-infected children
Abstract
Background: Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected children are at increased risk of meningococcal infection and poor response to quadrivalent meningococcal conjugate vaccine (MCV4), but MCV4 has not been studied in preadolescent HIV-infected children.
Methods: The P1065 trial enrolled 2- to 10-year-old HIV-infected children with CD4 ≥ 25% to receive MCV4 at entry and at week 24. Rates of response (≥ 4-fold increase in rabbit serum bactericidal antibody) against each meningococcal serogroup (A, C, Y, W-135), geometric mean titers, and rates of seroprotection (rabbit serum bactericidal antibody titer ≥ 1:128) were determined from sera obtained at entry and weeks 4, 24, 28, and 72. Adverse events were assessed for 6 weeks after each MCV4 dose.
Results: At entry, 47% of the 59 participants were male, 56% black, 31% Latino, median age was 6 years, 88% were receiving antiretroviral therapy, and 75% had viral load <400 copies/mL. There were no serious adverse events within 6 weeks after MCV4 doses; all vaccination reactions were mild. Response after a single MCV4 dose was high to serogroup A (92%) and W-135 (98%); responses improved after a second dose for serogroup C (43%-80%) (P < 0.0001) and Y (76%-84%) (P = 0.38). By week 72, seroprotection rates were 93%, 91%, 78%, and 46% for serogroups W-135, Y, A, and C, respectively.
Conclusions: Two doses of MCV4 were safe and immunogenic in 2- to 10-year-old HIV-infected children. The second dose increased the proportion of children who made a response to serogroup C. Seroprotection waned substantially for serogroups A and C within 1 year of last MCV4 dose.
References
-
- Dankner WM, Lindsey JC, et al. Correlates of opportunistic infections in children infected with the human immunodeficiency virus managed before highly active antiretroviral therapy. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2001;20(1):40–48. - PubMed
-
- Obaro SK, Pugatch D, Luzuriaga K. Immunogenicity and efficacy of childhood vaccines in HIV-1-infected children. Lancet Infect Dis. 2004;4:510–518. - PubMed
-
- Cohen C, Singh E, Wu HM, Martin S, de Gouveia L, Klugman KP, Meiring S, Govender N, von Gottberg A. Group for Enteric Respiratory and Meningeal disease Surveillance in South Africa (GERMS-SA). Increased incidence of meningococcal disease in HIV-infected individuals associated with higher case-fatality ratios in South Africa. AIDS. 2010;24(9):1351–60. - PubMed
-
- Gona P, Van Dyke RB, et al. Incidence of opportunistic and other infections in HIV-infected children in the HAART era. JAMA. 2006;296(3):292–300. - PubMed
-
- Abzug MJ, Pelton SI, Song LY, et al. Pediatric AIDS Clinical Trials Group P1024 Protocol Team. Immunogenicity, safety, and predictors of response after a pneumococcal conjugate and pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine series in human immunodeficiency virus-infected children receiving highly active antiretroviral therapy. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2006;25:920–9. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
- Z99 OD999999/ImNIH/Intramural NIH HHS/United States
- Z99 MH999999/ImNIH/Intramural NIH HHS/United States
- UL1 RR029890/RR/NCRR NIH HHS/United States
- HHSN267200800001G/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States
- U01 AI068632/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States
- UM1 AI069477/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States
- U01 AI068616/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States
- HHSN267200800001C/HD/NICHD NIH HHS/United States
- U01 AI041110/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States
- Z99 DA999999/ImNIH/Intramural NIH HHS/United States
- Z99 HD999999/ImNIH/Intramural NIH HHS/United States
- UL1 RR029893/RR/NCRR NIH HHS/United States
- UM1 AI068632/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States
- Z99 HL999999/ImNIH/Intramural NIH HHS/United States
- N01-DK-9-001/HHSN267200800001C/DK/NIDDK NIH HHS/United States
- HHSN272200800014C/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States
- AI068632/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States
- 1 U01 AI068616/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States
- 5 U01 AI41110/AI/NIAID NIH HHS/United States
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials
