Up
to 91 percent of bacterial strains causing a common type of invasive serogroup
B meningococcal disease in children and young adults are likely to be covered
by a four-component vaccine called MenB-4C (Bexsero), according to laboratory
studies conducted by investigators at the federal Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) and at GlaxoSmithKline, manufacturer of the vaccine. The
work was published recently.
Researchers
used a laboratory test called the Meningococcal Antigen Typing System (MATS) to
study the coverage potential of the MenB-4C vaccine, which was approved by the
Food and Drug Administration in January 2015 for use in individuals ages 10-25
years. The vaccine contains 4 antigens to prevent invasive meningococcal
disease caused by the serogroup B form of the bacteria Neisseria meningitidis:
factor H binding protein (fHBP), Neisserial heparin binding protein (NHBA), Neisserial
adhesin A (NadA) and PorA-containing outer membrane vesicles. These antigens
are found on the bacteria, and vaccination with them induces an immune response
in the recipients that helps protect them from infection by the bacteria that
carry the antigens. In the United States in 2015, serogroup B strains of the
bacteria caused approximately 40 percent of invasive meningococcal disease in
all age groups, including adolescents, and over 60 percent of cases in infants
aged less than one year.
Researchers
tested 442 N. meningitidis serogroup B samples collected by CDC from 2000 to
2008. The MATS test predicted that 91 percent of these bacterial strains
causing meningococcal disease in the United States would be covered by the
MenB-4C vaccine, with an estimated coverage ranging from 88 percent to 97
percent each year.
More
than half of the covered strains could be targeted by two or more antigens in
the vaccine, the investigators found. NHBA covered 83 percent of the strains,
fHBP covered 53 percent of the strains, PorA covered 5.9 percent of the strains
and NadA covered 2.5 percent of the strains.
See:
Posted by Dr. Tim Sandle
No comments:
Post a Comment
Pharmaceutical Microbiology Resources