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Abstract

Vol.64 No.2 March 2016

A phase I/II clinical study on ASP7374 (recombinant influenza hemagglutinin vaccine) in Japanese adults

Satoshi Iwata1), Kenichi Kato2), Yuki Oizumi2), Tomohiro Kusawake2), Sumito Ohkawa2) and Taishi Sakatani2)

1)Department of Infectious Diseases, Keio University School of Medicine, 35 Shinanomachi, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan
2)Global Development, Astellas Pharma Inc.

Abstract

The immunogenicity and safety of a single subcutaneous injection (2 dose regimens) and intramuscular injection (1 dose regimen) of a new influenza vaccine, ASP7374, were compared in this clinical study among healthy adults to determine a clinically recommended dose.
Adult healthy males and females (age range: 20-49 years) were randomly allocated to one of the following groups in a 1: 1: 1 ratio: group 1, a single subcutaneous injection of ASP7374 15 μg/strain; group 2, a single subcutaneous injection of ASP7374 45 μg/strain; or group 3, a single intramuscular injection of ASP7374 45 μg/strain. Subjects were treated under open label conditions with intramuscular injections and double-blinded conditions with subcutaneous injection.
The geometric mean hemagglutination-inhibition(HI) antibody titer 28 days postvaccination was higher than that at baseline in all treatment groups among the strains (A/H1N1, A/H3N2, and B strain). The geometric mean HI antibody titer ratio (postvaccination/baseline) and seroconversion rate were highest with the intramuscular injection of ASP7374 45 μg/strain with any vaccine strain, followed by the subcutaneous injection of ASP7374 45 μg/strain and 15 μg/strain. All of the treatment groups had nearly 100% seroprotection rate 28 days postvaccination. The proportion of subjects with adverse events was higher in the subcutaneous injection groups (60.0% in the ASP7374 15 μg/strain group and 65.5% in the 45 μg/strain group) than in the intramuscular injection group (43.6%). A similar tendency was observed for local and systemic reactions. Most of the local/systemic reactions occurred within 2 days of administering the injections, and they resolved within 8 days of onset. In conclusion, the ASP7374 influenza vaccine injection had adequate immunogenicity and a well-tolerated safety profile. The subcutaneous injection of ASP7374 45 μg/strain and intramuscular injection of ASP7374 45 μg/strain appeared to be the clinically recommended doses.

Key word

influenza, HA vaccine, phase I/II study, adult

Received

June 29, 2015

Accepted

November 17, 2015

Jpn. J. Chemother. 64 (2): 244-252, 2016