Conference Coverage

Current PERISCOPE vaccine studies: Toward better pertussis prevention?


 

FROM ESPID 2020

The BERT study

The final clinical element of PERISCOPE presented by Dr. Kelly was the Booster against Pertussis study. This study is near completion. It seeks to examine the use of an acellular booster across different age groups and three countries: the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Finland. The study is being coordinated by Guy Berbers, PhD, at the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment in the Netherlands.

BERT comprises four cohorts (A, B, C, D) of different ages: 7-10 years (36 participants), 11-15 years (36 participants), mid-adult (25 participants), and older age (25 participants). After receiving an acellular booster, participants will undergo intense sampling. Sampling will take place immediately after immunization at day 7 and look at adaptive effects, then again at day 28 and day 365.

Because some participants will have already received whole cell or acellular vaccination, this approach will allow researchers to look at the effects of priming (i.e., how long the B cell/T cell antibody responses last).

Involving different countries across Europe ensures wide applicability of results, but also allows researchers to compare the effects of very different immunization histories.

At the end of this ESPID session, Dimitri Diavatopoulos, PhD, assistant professor at the Radboud University Medical Centre Nijmegen, the Netherlands, commented that a future problem in studying pertussis vaccines and their potential clinical application is that most vaccination schedules now involve combination products. Obtaining a stand-alone vaccination may prove difficult, and there may be resistance if it complicates current vaccination programs.

Dr. Kelly acknowledged funding for the PERISCOPE project from GlaxoSmithKline and Pasteur Sanofi.

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