The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Efficacy and safety of a recombinant plant-based adjuvanted Covid-19 vaccine

Efficacy and safety of a recombinant plant-based adjuvanted Covid-19 vaccine
Efficacy and safety of a recombinant plant-based adjuvanted Covid-19 vaccine

Backgroud: coronavirus-like particles (CoVLP) that are produced in plants and display the prefusion spike glycoprotein of the original strain of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) are combined with an adjuvant (Adjuvant System 03 [AS03]) to form the candidate vaccine.

Methods: in this phase 3, multinational, randomized, placebo-controlled trial conducted at 85 centers, we assigned adults (≥18 years of age) in a 1:1 ratio to receive two intramuscular injections of the CoVLP+AS03 vaccine or placebo 21 days apart. The primary objective of the trial was to determine the efficacy of the CoVLP+AS03 vaccine in preventing symptomatic coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) beginning at least 7 days after the second injection, with the analysis performed after the detection of at least 160 cases.

Results: a total of 24,141 volunteers participated in the trial; the median age of the participants was 29 years. Covid-19 was confirmed by polymerase-chain-reaction assay in 165 participants in the intention-to-treat population; all viral samples that could be sequenced contained variants of the original strain. Vaccine efficacy was 69.5% (95% confidence interval [CI], 56.7 to 78.8) against any symptomatic Covid-19 caused by five variants that were identified by sequencing. In a post hoc analysis, vaccine efficacy was 78.8% (95% CI, 55.8 to 90.8) against moderate-to-severe disease and 74.0% (95% CI, 62.1 to 82.5) among the participants who were seronegative at baseline. No severe cases of Covid-19 occurred in the vaccine group, in which the median viral load for breakthrough cases was lower than that in the placebo group by a factor of more than 100. Solicited adverse events were mostly mild or moderate and transient and were more frequent in the vaccine group than in the placebo group; local adverse events occurred in 92.3% and 45.5% of participants, respectively, and systemic adverse events in 87.3% and 65.0%. The incidence of unsolicited adverse events was similar in the two groups up to 21 days after each dose (22.7% and 20.4%) and from day 43 through day 201 (4.2% and 4.0%).

Conclusions: the CoVLP+AS03 vaccine was effective in preventing Covid-19 caused by a spectrum of variants, with efficacy ranging from 69.5% against symptomatic infection to 78.8% against moderate-to-severe disease. (Funded by Medicago; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04636697.).

Adjuvants, Immunologic/administration & dosage, Adjuvants, Vaccine/administration & dosage, Adult, Antibodies, Viral, COVID-19 Vaccines/administration & dosage, COVID-19/genetics, Double-Blind Method, Humans, Injections, Intramuscular, SARS-CoV-2/genetics, Vaccination
0028-4793
2084-2096
Hager, Karen J
d541836f-97d9-47a1-808d-7e06a377aa54
Pérez Marc, Gonzalo
6893d81c-b02c-4f56-8b36-15670942d73e
Gobeil, Philipe
b359ced0-58ac-41df-b7a7-3c5093a46a19
Diaz, Ricardo S
5eccd79d-ee07-4024-901b-6e3219295d46
Heizer, Gretchen
db2d2846-a418-4b8a-98a3-60043fd9b4f0
Llapur, Conrado
59aac925-4aaa-48a5-a2ef-0730518c78cd
Makarkov, Alexander I
a0e6d57a-05be-449b-9c6f-40f56435eee7
Vasconcellos, Eduardo
ae69c2dc-ef3b-4042-addb-e683fd04d830
Pillet, Stéphane
b63044c2-ba76-4e3e-84cb-f1b1e01948ca
Riera, Fernando
84222247-44f6-46aa-a7b7-4096e0c12871
Saxena, Pooja
81688c04-d684-43b2-8dae-dc166b5df76f
Geller Wolff, Priscila
c8cb1329-5fbb-44b7-95e7-62325e66be78
Bhutada, Kapil
145d0760-1b78-4485-b26d-51689b615029
Wallace, Garry
bb9cc9af-4abd-4a74-8a64-2f935734dab7
Aazami, Hessam
e2d11c8a-8244-4330-8e94-a690bee7dae5
Jones, Christine E
48229079-8b58-4dcb-8374-d9481fe7b426
Polack, Fernando P
4fdb8316-aac5-4a3f-aba1-8734a9ef7dd4
Ferrara, Luciana
04122263-22b2-4782-9e0b-dcb28ee4934e
Atkins, Judith
a85eb7c1-987c-428e-aae0-2b76b17acf0e
Boulay, Iohann
3fc7e7d8-edd0-48c7-bc9f-4a6e3d6aa4fc
Dhaliwall, Jiwanjeet
0ffa0e34-ea26-452c-8150-6f4ffc8d37d9
Charland, Nathalie
ca7c2db5-a1de-47bc-bb28-2f0ca854a8b5
Couture, Manon M J
574d9d0b-ac24-48e4-874c-2f22911a713b
Jiang-Wright, Julia
1457644e-226d-491a-b908-e71cf3d7745a
Landry, Nathalie
7abab795-f418-4014-9434-924862174061
Lapointe, Sophie
8884ea8c-6c16-4b0a-ba69-3dc3c6463786
Lorin, Aurélien
8696bbf4-b400-4bc0-87e2-a08226305e79
Mahmood, Asif
5356ebf4-5441-4228-805e-47c1b3f35929
Moulton, Lawrence H
19ff592d-9f22-45e4-874e-db6e80f552ef
Pahmer, Emmy
6839b48d-6535-43e4-8bf7-e72961f6fa38
Parent, Julie
9a988926-bfe0-4b6c-bf75-4af5f2bc2211
Séguin, Annie
eb454601-2b87-4644-ae60-effa0e5d755c
Tran, Luan
9c290cec-6b54-40ca-a532-4096d208a83f
Breuer, Thomas
ea6362b9-6939-4272-b55e-be07a07b5306
Ceregido, Maria-Angeles
04acc3e8-27e2-4a4e-80c4-69389dcbe9d8
Koutsoukos, Marguerite
888779e9-17a5-44f2-b5b0-1428de197f3f
Roman, François
3ace0706-f46d-480c-819d-b7881c7c88bf
Namba, Junya
20498d9b-91c5-4241-a029-fc312e480927
D'Aoust, Marc-André
50e537f3-6bff-435b-b72f-b08bdd629ab5
Trepanier, Sonia
78cc6138-ca8d-4787-807c-437a75fcad0c
Kimura, Yosuke
1bef8660-3f5b-4e27-9fc8-af9ccc3bbeb6
Ward, Brian J
f79ad9d6-1ae6-43ec-a633-2089b5123571
CoVLP Study Team
et al.
Hager, Karen J
d541836f-97d9-47a1-808d-7e06a377aa54
Pérez Marc, Gonzalo
6893d81c-b02c-4f56-8b36-15670942d73e
Gobeil, Philipe
b359ced0-58ac-41df-b7a7-3c5093a46a19
Diaz, Ricardo S
5eccd79d-ee07-4024-901b-6e3219295d46
Heizer, Gretchen
db2d2846-a418-4b8a-98a3-60043fd9b4f0
Llapur, Conrado
59aac925-4aaa-48a5-a2ef-0730518c78cd
Makarkov, Alexander I
a0e6d57a-05be-449b-9c6f-40f56435eee7
Vasconcellos, Eduardo
ae69c2dc-ef3b-4042-addb-e683fd04d830
Pillet, Stéphane
b63044c2-ba76-4e3e-84cb-f1b1e01948ca
Riera, Fernando
84222247-44f6-46aa-a7b7-4096e0c12871
Saxena, Pooja
81688c04-d684-43b2-8dae-dc166b5df76f
Geller Wolff, Priscila
c8cb1329-5fbb-44b7-95e7-62325e66be78
Bhutada, Kapil
145d0760-1b78-4485-b26d-51689b615029
Wallace, Garry
bb9cc9af-4abd-4a74-8a64-2f935734dab7
Aazami, Hessam
e2d11c8a-8244-4330-8e94-a690bee7dae5
Jones, Christine E
48229079-8b58-4dcb-8374-d9481fe7b426
Polack, Fernando P
4fdb8316-aac5-4a3f-aba1-8734a9ef7dd4
Ferrara, Luciana
04122263-22b2-4782-9e0b-dcb28ee4934e
Atkins, Judith
a85eb7c1-987c-428e-aae0-2b76b17acf0e
Boulay, Iohann
3fc7e7d8-edd0-48c7-bc9f-4a6e3d6aa4fc
Dhaliwall, Jiwanjeet
0ffa0e34-ea26-452c-8150-6f4ffc8d37d9
Charland, Nathalie
ca7c2db5-a1de-47bc-bb28-2f0ca854a8b5
Couture, Manon M J
574d9d0b-ac24-48e4-874c-2f22911a713b
Jiang-Wright, Julia
1457644e-226d-491a-b908-e71cf3d7745a
Landry, Nathalie
7abab795-f418-4014-9434-924862174061
Lapointe, Sophie
8884ea8c-6c16-4b0a-ba69-3dc3c6463786
Lorin, Aurélien
8696bbf4-b400-4bc0-87e2-a08226305e79
Mahmood, Asif
5356ebf4-5441-4228-805e-47c1b3f35929
Moulton, Lawrence H
19ff592d-9f22-45e4-874e-db6e80f552ef
Pahmer, Emmy
6839b48d-6535-43e4-8bf7-e72961f6fa38
Parent, Julie
9a988926-bfe0-4b6c-bf75-4af5f2bc2211
Séguin, Annie
eb454601-2b87-4644-ae60-effa0e5d755c
Tran, Luan
9c290cec-6b54-40ca-a532-4096d208a83f
Breuer, Thomas
ea6362b9-6939-4272-b55e-be07a07b5306
Ceregido, Maria-Angeles
04acc3e8-27e2-4a4e-80c4-69389dcbe9d8
Koutsoukos, Marguerite
888779e9-17a5-44f2-b5b0-1428de197f3f
Roman, François
3ace0706-f46d-480c-819d-b7881c7c88bf
Namba, Junya
20498d9b-91c5-4241-a029-fc312e480927
D'Aoust, Marc-André
50e537f3-6bff-435b-b72f-b08bdd629ab5
Trepanier, Sonia
78cc6138-ca8d-4787-807c-437a75fcad0c
Kimura, Yosuke
1bef8660-3f5b-4e27-9fc8-af9ccc3bbeb6
Ward, Brian J
f79ad9d6-1ae6-43ec-a633-2089b5123571

Hager, Karen J, Pérez Marc, Gonzalo, Gobeil, Philipe, Diaz, Ricardo S, Heizer, Gretchen and Llapur, Conrado , CoVLP Study Team and et al. (2022) Efficacy and safety of a recombinant plant-based adjuvanted Covid-19 vaccine. New England Journal of Medicine, 386 (22), 2084-2096. (doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2201300).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Backgroud: coronavirus-like particles (CoVLP) that are produced in plants and display the prefusion spike glycoprotein of the original strain of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) are combined with an adjuvant (Adjuvant System 03 [AS03]) to form the candidate vaccine.

Methods: in this phase 3, multinational, randomized, placebo-controlled trial conducted at 85 centers, we assigned adults (≥18 years of age) in a 1:1 ratio to receive two intramuscular injections of the CoVLP+AS03 vaccine or placebo 21 days apart. The primary objective of the trial was to determine the efficacy of the CoVLP+AS03 vaccine in preventing symptomatic coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) beginning at least 7 days after the second injection, with the analysis performed after the detection of at least 160 cases.

Results: a total of 24,141 volunteers participated in the trial; the median age of the participants was 29 years. Covid-19 was confirmed by polymerase-chain-reaction assay in 165 participants in the intention-to-treat population; all viral samples that could be sequenced contained variants of the original strain. Vaccine efficacy was 69.5% (95% confidence interval [CI], 56.7 to 78.8) against any symptomatic Covid-19 caused by five variants that were identified by sequencing. In a post hoc analysis, vaccine efficacy was 78.8% (95% CI, 55.8 to 90.8) against moderate-to-severe disease and 74.0% (95% CI, 62.1 to 82.5) among the participants who were seronegative at baseline. No severe cases of Covid-19 occurred in the vaccine group, in which the median viral load for breakthrough cases was lower than that in the placebo group by a factor of more than 100. Solicited adverse events were mostly mild or moderate and transient and were more frequent in the vaccine group than in the placebo group; local adverse events occurred in 92.3% and 45.5% of participants, respectively, and systemic adverse events in 87.3% and 65.0%. The incidence of unsolicited adverse events was similar in the two groups up to 21 days after each dose (22.7% and 20.4%) and from day 43 through day 201 (4.2% and 4.0%).

Conclusions: the CoVLP+AS03 vaccine was effective in preventing Covid-19 caused by a spectrum of variants, with efficacy ranging from 69.5% against symptomatic infection to 78.8% against moderate-to-severe disease. (Funded by Medicago; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04636697.).

Text
Medicago Ph 3 Manuscript - Accepted Manuscript
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (1MB)

More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 4 May 2022
Published date: 2 June 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: Enrollment for this ongoing randomized, placebo-controlled trial was conducted from March 15 to September 2, 2021, at 85 sites in Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Mexico, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The trial, which was funded by Medicago with financial support from the Canadian Innovation, Science and Economic Development Strategic Innovation Fund, was designed by company representatives with input from Glaxo-SmithKline. Syneos Health Canada provided trial-management services. Site investigators were responsible for the recruitment of trial participants, local trial conduct, and data collection. Key laboratory analyses were performed by Viroclinics. All the participants provided written informed consent. Funding Information: Supported by Medicago with financial assistance from the Canadian Innovation, Science and Economic Development Strategic Innovation Fund. Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2022 Massachusetts Medical Society
Keywords: Adjuvants, Immunologic/administration & dosage, Adjuvants, Vaccine/administration & dosage, Adult, Antibodies, Viral, COVID-19 Vaccines/administration & dosage, COVID-19/genetics, Double-Blind Method, Humans, Injections, Intramuscular, SARS-CoV-2/genetics, Vaccination

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 467745
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/467745
ISSN: 0028-4793
PURE UUID: 012562fc-1c03-4157-9869-342bcb622080
ORCID for Christine E Jones: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1523-2368

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 21 Jul 2022 16:58
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:45

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Karen J Hager
Author: Gonzalo Pérez Marc
Author: Philipe Gobeil
Author: Ricardo S Diaz
Author: Gretchen Heizer
Author: Conrado Llapur
Author: Alexander I Makarkov
Author: Eduardo Vasconcellos
Author: Stéphane Pillet
Author: Fernando Riera
Author: Pooja Saxena
Author: Priscila Geller Wolff
Author: Kapil Bhutada
Author: Garry Wallace
Author: Hessam Aazami
Author: Fernando P Polack
Author: Luciana Ferrara
Author: Judith Atkins
Author: Iohann Boulay
Author: Jiwanjeet Dhaliwall
Author: Nathalie Charland
Author: Manon M J Couture
Author: Julia Jiang-Wright
Author: Nathalie Landry
Author: Sophie Lapointe
Author: Aurélien Lorin
Author: Asif Mahmood
Author: Lawrence H Moulton
Author: Emmy Pahmer
Author: Julie Parent
Author: Annie Séguin
Author: Luan Tran
Author: Thomas Breuer
Author: Maria-Angeles Ceregido
Author: Marguerite Koutsoukos
Author: François Roman
Author: Junya Namba
Author: Marc-André D'Aoust
Author: Sonia Trepanier
Author: Yosuke Kimura
Author: Brian J Ward
Corporate Author: CoVLP Study Team
Corporate Author: et al.

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×