4.7 Article

The Safety, Immunogenicity, and Immunopersistence of Hepatitis A Vaccine in HBs-Ag-Positive Participants: A Retrospective Study

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.672221

Keywords

hepatitis A vaccines; immunogenicity; immune persistence; hepatitis B surface antigen; safety

Funding

  1. National The 12th Five Year Major New Drug Discovery' Technology Major Projects [2012ZX09104-302]
  2. National Project in Yunnan Province [2013GA018]
  3. CAMS Initiative for Innovative Medicine (CAMS-I2M) [2017-I2M-2-006]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31970868]
  5. Major Science and Technology Projects of Yunnan Province [2019ZF004]
  6. Youth Project in Yunnan Province [2019FD082]

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This study compared the safety, immunogenicity, and immune persistence of hepatitis A vaccines between HBs-Ag-positive and -negative participants. Results showed that both types of vaccines were safe and provided excellent long-term protection against HAV for HBs-Ag-positive individuals.
Objectives To compare the safety, immunogenicity, and immune persistence of hepatitis A (HA) vaccines between HBs-Ag-positive and -negative participants. Method 9000 participants were enrolled in the phase IV study of live attenuated HA (HA-L) or inactivated HA (HA-I) vaccines. The HBs-Ag-positive subjects were detected and became an independent observation group. Adverse reactions (ARs), geometric mean concentrations (GMCs) and seroconversion rates (SRs) of the vaccines were analyzed at five time points until three years after vaccination. Results: 120 HBs-Ag-positive subjects were screened out, only 1 participant had grade 1 experienced ARs after HA-L injection. Except the time point of two years, the SRs of HBs-Ag-positive group were 100% for both vaccines. The GMCs were not statistically different between HBs-Ag-positive and -negative groups after the HA-L vaccination. The logarithmically transformed GMCs for HBs-Ag-positive and -negative groups were 3.21 mIU/mL (95% CI, 2.03-4.39 mIU/mL) and 2.95 mIU/mL (95% CI, 2.88-3.02 mIU/mL) 28 days after the HA-L vaccination, respectively. Conclusions Both HA-L and HA-I vaccines were safe for HBs-Ag-positive participants and may provide an excellent long-term protection against HAV in this study. The results indicated that people positive or negative for HBs-Ag can receive both HA-L and HA-I vaccines (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02601040).

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