Safety and immunogenicity of heat-treated zoster vaccine (ZVHT) in immunocompromised adults.

Journal: The Journal Of Infectious Diseases
Published:
Abstract

Background: Safety and immunogenicity of heat-treated zoster vaccine (ZVHT) were assessed in immunocompromised adults.

Methods: In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicenter study, 4 doses ZVHT or placebo were administered approximately 30 days apart to adults with either solid tumor malignancy (STM); hematologic malignancy (HM); human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) with CD4(+) ≤200; autologous hematopoietic stem-cell transplant (HCT) or allogeneic-HCT recipients. Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) T-cell responses by interferon-γ enzyme-linked immunospot (IFN-γ ELISPOT) and VZV antibody concentrations by glycoprotein enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (gpELISA) were measured at baseline and approximately 28 days after each dose.

Results: No safety signals were found in any group. IFN-γ ELISPOT geometric mean fold rises (GMFR) after dose 4 in STM, HM, HIV, and autologous-HCT patients were 3.00 (P < .0001), 2.23 (P = .004), 1.76 (P = .026), and 9.01 (P = NA), respectively. Similarly, antibody GMFR were 2.35 (P < .0001), 1.28 (P = .003), 1.37 (P = .017), and 0.90 (P = NA), respectively. T-cell and antibody responses were poor after 4 doses of ZVHT in allogeneic-HCT patients.

Conclusions: ZVHT was generally safe and immunogenic through 28 days post-dose 4 in adults with STM, HM, and HIV. Autologous-HCT but not allogeneic-HCT patients had a rise in T-cell response; antibody responses were not increased in either HCT population. Study identification. V212-002 Clinical Trials Registration. NCT00535236.

Authors
Kathleen Mullane, Drew Winston, Michael Wertheim, Robert Betts, Donald Poretz, Luis Camacho, Steven Pergam, Michael Mullane, Jon Stek, Tina Sterling, Yanli Zhao, Susan Manoff, Paula Annunziato
Relevant Conditions

Shingles