The immunogenicity and safety of Group B Streptococcal maternal vaccines: A systematic review
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/32448Date
2023-12-09Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Bjerkhaug, Aline Uhirwa; Ramalingham, Shouwmika; Mboizi, Robert; Le Doare, Kirsty; Klingenberg, ClausAbstract
Methods: EMBASE, MEDLINE, Cochrane Library and clinicaltrial.gov. databases were searched for clinical studies that reported immunogenicity and/or safety of GBS vaccine in non-pregnant adults, pregnant women and infants between 1st of January 1996 to 31st of July 2023. Pairs of reviewers independently selected, data extracted, and assessed the risk of bias of the studies. Discrepancies were resolved by consensus. (PROSPERO CRD42020185213).
Results: We retrieved 1472 records from the literature search; 20 studies and 6 sub-studies were included, involving 4440 non-pregnant participants and 1325 pregnant women with their newborns. There was a significantly higher IgG Geometric Mean Concentration (GMC) and IgG placental transfer ratios in vaccinated compared to placebo groups, with peak response 4–8 weeks after vaccination. Placental transfer ratio varied from 0.4 to 1.4 across five studies. The different clinical trials used different assays that limited direct comparison. There were no significant differences in the risk of serious adverse events (adjusted OR 0.73; 95 % CI 0.49–1.07), serious adverse events leading to withdrawal (adjusted OR 0.44; 95 % CI 0.13–1.51), and systemic illness or fever (adjusted OR 1.05; 95 % CI 0.26–4.19) between the vaccine and placebo groups.
Conclusions: The published clinical trials show significant IgG GMC response in subjects receiving the conjugated capsular polysaccharide and surface subunit protein vaccines compared to placebo. In current clinical trials of experimental GBS maternal vaccines, there have been no observed serious adverse events of special interest directly linked to vaccination.