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Dive into the research topics where Roman Prymula is active.

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Featured researches published by Roman Prymula.


The Lancet | 2006

Pneumococcal capsular polysaccharides conjugated to protein D for prevention of acute otitis media caused by both Streptococcus pneumoniae and non-typable Haemophilus influenzae: a randomised double-blind efficacy study

Roman Prymula; Pascal Peeters; Viktor Chrobok; Pavla Kriz; E. Novakova; Eva Kaliskova; Igor Kohl; Patricia Lommel; Jan Poolman; Jean-Paul Prieels; Lode Schuerman

Summary Background Acute otitis media is one of the most commonly-diagnosed childhood infections. This study assessed the efficacy of a novel vaccine that contained polysaccharides from 11 different Streptococcus pneumoniae serotypes each conjugated to Haemophilus influenzae -derived protein D in prevention of acute otitis media. Methods 4968 infants were randomly assigned to receive either pneumococcal protein D conjugate or hepatitis A vaccine at the ages of 3, 4, 5, and 12–15 months and were followed-up until the end of the second year of life. Middle-ear fluid was obtained for bacteriological culture and serotyping in children who presented with abnormal tympanic membrane or presence of middle-ear effusion, plus two predefined clinical symptoms. The primary endpoint was protective efficacy against the first episode of acute otitis media caused by vaccine pneumococcal serotypes. Analysis was per protocol. Findings From 2 weeks after the third dose to 24–27 months of age, 333 clinical episodes of acute otitis media were recorded in the protein D conjugate group (n=2455) and 499 in the control group (n=2452), giving a significant (33·6% [95% CI 20·8–44·3]) reduction in the overall incidence of acute otitis media. Vaccine efficacy was shown for episodes of acute otitis media caused by pneumococcal vaccine serotypes (52·6% [35·0–65·5] for the first episode and 57·6% [41·4–69·3] for any episode). Efficacy was also shown against episodes of acute otitis media caused by non-typable H influenzae (35·3% [1·8–57·4]). The vaccine reduced frequency of infection from vaccine-related cross-reactive pneumococcal serotypes by 65·5%, but did not significantly change the number of episodes caused by other non-vaccine serotypes. Interpretation These results confirm that using the H influenzae -derived protein D as a carrier protein for pneumococcal polysaccharides not only allowed protection against pneumococcal otitis, but also against acute otitis media due to non-typable H influenzae . Whether this approach would also allow improved protection against lower respiratory tract infections warrants further investigation.


The Lancet | 2007

Efficacy of human rotavirus vaccine against rotavirus gastroenteritis during the first 2 years of life in European infants: randomised, double-blind controlled study

Timo Vesikari; Aino Karvonen; Roman Prymula; V Schuster; Jc Tejedor; Robert M. Cohen; F Meurice; Htay-Htay Han; Silvia Damaso; Alain Bouckenooghe

BACKGROUND We aimed to assess the efficacy of the oral live attenuated human rotavirus vaccine Rotarix (RIX4414) for prevention of rotavirus gastroenteritis in European infants during their first 2 years of life. METHODS 3994 study participants were enrolled from six countries and were randomly assigned two oral doses of either RIX4414 (n=2646) or placebo (n=1348), which were coadministered with the first two doses of specific childhood vaccinations. Follow-up for gastroenteritis episodes was undertaken from 2 weeks post-dose two through the two consecutive rotavirus seasons following vaccinations (combined efficacy follow-up period; mean duration 17 months [SD 1.6]). Our primary endpoint was vaccine efficacy against rotavirus gastroenteritis of any severity during the first efficacy follow-up period (2 weeks post-dose two to the end of the first rotavirus season). Stool specimens obtained during gastroenteritis episodes were tested for rotavirus by ELISA and typed by RT-PCR. Episodes scoring 11 or greater on the 20-point Vesikari scale were classified as severe. Analysis was according to protocol. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00140686 (eTrack102247). FINDINGS 120 infants were excluded from the according-to-protocol analysis. During the first efficacy follow-up period (mean duration 5.7 months [SD 1.2]), 24 of 2572 infants allocated RIX4414 versus 94 of 1302 given placebo had rotavirus gastroenteritis episodes of any severity, resulting in a vaccine efficacy of 87.1% (95% CI 79.6-92.1; p<0.0001). For the combined efficacy follow-up period, vaccine efficacy against severe rotavirus gastroenteritis was 90.4% (85.1-94.1; p<0.0001), for admission owing to rotavirus gastroenteritis 96.0% (83.8-99.5; p<0.0001), and for rotavirus-related medical attention 83.8% (76.8-88.9; p<0.0001), and significant protection against severe rotavirus gastroenteritis by circulating G1, G2, G3, G4, and G9 rotavirus types was shown. INTERPRETATION In a European setting, two doses of RIX4414 coadministered with childhood vaccines provided high protection against any and severe rotavirus gastroenteritis, with an overall reduction of admissions for gastroenteritis over two consecutive rotavirus epidemic seasons.


The Lancet | 2009

Effect of prophylactic paracetamol administration at time of vaccination on febrile reactions and antibody responses in children: two open-label, randomised controlled trials

Roman Prymula; Claire-Anne Siegrist; Roman Chlibek; Helena Zemlickova; Marie Vacková; Jan Smetana; Patricia Lommel; Eva Kaliskova; Dorota Borys; Lode Schuerman

BACKGROUND Although fever is part of the normal inflammatory process after immunisation, prophylactic antipyretic drugs are sometimes recommended to allay concerns of high fever and febrile convulsion. We assessed the effect of prophylactic administration of paracetamol at vaccination on infant febrile reaction rates and vaccine responses. METHODS In two consecutive (primary and booster) randomised, controlled, open-label vaccination studies, 459 healthy infants were enrolled from ten centres in the Czech Republic. Infants were randomly assigned with a computer-generated randomisation list to receive three prophylactic paracetamol doses every 6-8 h in the first 24 h (n=226) or no prophylactic paracetamol (n=233) after each vaccination with a ten-valent pneumococcal non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae protein D-conjugate vaccine (PHiD-CV) co-administered with the hexavalent diphtheria-tetanus-3-component acellular pertussis-hepatitis B-inactivated poliovirus types 1, 2, and 3-H influenzae type b (DTPa-HBV-IPV/Hib) and oral human rotavirus vaccines. The primary objective in both studies was the reduction in febrile reactions of 38.0 degrees C or greater in the total vaccinated cohort. The second objective was assessment of immunogenicity in the according-to-protocol cohort. These studies are registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, numbers NCT00370318 and NCT00496015. FINDINGS Fever greater than 39.5 degrees C was uncommon in both groups (after primary: one of 226 participants [<1%] in prophylactic paracetamol group vs three of 233 [1%] in no prophylactic paracetamol group; after booster: three of 178 [2%] vs two of 172 [1%]). The percentage of children with temperature of 38 degrees C or greater after at least one dose was significantly lower in the prophylactic paracetamol group (94/226 [42%] after primary vaccination and 64/178 [36%] after booster vaccination) than in the no prophylactic paracetamol group (154/233 [66%] after primary vaccination and 100/172 [58%] after booster vaccination). Antibody geometric mean concentrations (GMCs) were significantly lower in the prophylactic paracetamol group than in the no prophylactic paracetamol group after primary vaccination for all ten pneumococcal vaccine serotypes, protein D, antipolyribosyl-ribitol phosphate, antidiphtheria, antitetanus, and antipertactin. After boosting, lower antibody GMCs persisted in the prophylactic paracetamol group for antitetanus, protein D, and all pneumococcal serotypes apart from 19F. INTERPRETATION Although febrile reactions significantly decreased, prophylactic administration of antipyretic drugs at the time of vaccination should not be routinely recommended since antibody responses to several vaccine antigens were reduced. FUNDING GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals (Belgium).


JAMA | 2012

Immunogenicity and Tolerability of Recombinant Serogroup B Meningococcal Vaccine Administered With or Without Routine Infant Vaccinations According to Different Immunization Schedules: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Nicoletta Gossger; Matthew D. Snape; Ly-Mee Yu; Adam Finn; Gianni Bona; Susanna Esposito; Nicola Principi; Javier Díez-Domingo; Etienne Sokal; Birgitta Becker; Dorothee Kieninger; Roman Prymula; Peter M. Dull; Ellen Ypma; Daniela Toneatto; Alan Kimura; Andrew J. Pollard

CONTEXT In the absence of an effective vaccine, serogroup B Neisseria meningitidis (MenB) remains a major cause of invasive disease in early childhood in developed countries. OBJECTIVE To determine the immunogenicity and reactogenicity of a multicomponent MenB vaccine (4CMenB) and routine infant vaccines when given either concomitantly or separately. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Phase 2b, multicenter, open-label, parallel-group, randomized controlled study of 1885 infants enrolled at age 2 months from August 2008 to July 2010 in Europe. INTERVENTION Participants were randomized 2:2:1:1 to receive (1) 4CMenB at 2, 4, and 6 months with routine vaccines (7-valent pneumococcal and combined diphtheria, tetanus, acellular pertussis, inactivated polio, hepatitis B, Haemophilus influenzae type b vaccines); (2) 4CMenB at 2, 4, and 6 months and routine vaccines at 3, 5, and 7 months; (3) 4CMenB with routine vaccines at 2, 3, and 4 months; or (4) routine vaccines alone at 2, 3, and 4 months. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Percentage of participants with human complement serum bactericidal activity (hSBA) titer of 1:5 or greater against 3 MenB strains specific for vaccine antigens (NZ98/254, 44/76-SL, and 5/99). RESULTS After three 4CMenB vaccinations, 99% or more of infants developed hSBA titers of 1:5 or greater against strains 44/76-SL and 5/99. For NZ98/254, this proportion was 79% (95% CI, 75.2%-82.4%) for vaccination at 2, 4, and 6 months with routine vaccines, 86.1% (95% CI, 82.9%-89.0%) for vaccination at 2, 4, and 6 months without routine vaccines, and 81.7% (95% CI, 76.6%-86.2%) for vaccination at 2, 3, and 4 months with routine vaccines. Responses to routine vaccines given with 4CMenB were noninferior to routine vaccines alone for all antigens, except for the responses to pertactin and serotype 6B pneumococcal polysaccharide. Fever was seen following 26% (158/602) to 41% (247/607) of 4CMenB doses when administered alone, compared with 23% (69/304) to 36% (109/306) after routine vaccines given alone and 51% (306/605) to 61% (380/624) after 4CMenB and routine vaccines administered together. CONCLUSION A 4CMenB vaccine is immunogenic against reference strains when administered with routine vaccines at 2, 4, and 6 or at 2, 3, and 4 months of age, producing minimal interference with the response to routine infant vaccinations. TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00721396.


The Lancet | 2013

Immunogenicity and safety of an investigational multicomponent, recombinant, meningococcal serogroup B vaccine (4CMenB) administered concomitantly with routine infant and child vaccinations: results of two randomised trials

Timo Vesikari; Susanna Esposito; Roman Prymula; Ellen Ypma; Igor Kohl; Daniela Toneatto; Peter M. Dull; Alan Kimura

BACKGROUND Meningococcal serogroup B disease disproportionately affects infants. We assessed lot-to-lot consistency, safety and immunogenicity, and the effect of concomitant vaccination on responses to routine vaccines of an investigational multicomponent vaccine (4CMenB) in this population. METHODS We did primary and booster phase 3 studies between March 31, 2008, and Aug 16, 2010, in 70 sites in Europe. We used two series of sponsor-supplied, computer-generated randomisation envelopes to allocate healthy 2 month-old infants to receive routine vaccinations (diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis, inactivated poliovirus, hepatitis B plus Haemophilus influenzae type b, and seven-valent pneumococcal vaccine) at 2, 4, and 6 months of age alone, or concomitantly with 4CMenB or serogroup C conjugate vaccine (MenC) in: 1) an open-label, lot-to-lot immunogenicity and safety substudy of three 4CMenB lots compared with routine vaccines alone (1:1:1:1, block size eight); or 2) an observer-blind, lot-to-lot safety substudy of three 4CMenB lots compared with MenC (1:1:1:3, block size six). At 12 months, 4CMenB-primed children from either substudy were randomised (1:1, block size two) to receive 4CMenB booster, with or without measles-mumps-rubella-varicella (MMRV) vaccine. Immunogenicity was assessed by serum bactericidal assay with human complement (hSBA) against serogroup B test strains, and on randomly selected subsets of serum samples for routine vaccines; laboratory personnel were masked to assignment. The first coprimary outcome was lot-to-lot consistency (hSBA geometric mean ratio of all lots between 0·5 and 2·0), and the second was an immune response (hSBA titre ≥5) for each of the three strains. The primary outcome for the booster study was immune response to booster dose. Immunogenicity data for 4CMenB were for the modified intention-to-treat population, including all infants from the open-label substudy who provided serum samples. The safety population included all participants who contributed safety data after at least one dose of study vaccine. These trials are registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, numbers NCT00657709 and NCT00847145. FINDINGS We enrolled 2627 infants in the open-label phase, 1003 in the observer-blind phase, and 1555 in the booster study. Lot-to-lot consistency was shown for the three 4CMenB lots, with the lowest 95% lower confidence limit being 0·74 and the highest upper limit being 1·33. Of 1181–1184 infants tested 1 month after three 4CMenB doses (all lots pooled), 100% (95% CI 99–100) had hSBA titres of 5 or more against strains selective for factor H binding protein and neisserial adhesin A, and 84% (82–86) for New Zealand outer-membrane vesicle. In a subset (n=100), 84% (75–91) of infants had hSBA titres of 5 or more against neisseria heparin binding antigen. At 12 months of age, waning titres were boosted by a fourth dose, such that 95–100% of children had hSBA titres of 5 or more for all antigens, with or without concomitant MMRV. Immune responses to routine vaccines were much the same with or without concomitant 4CMenB, but concomitant vaccination was associated with increased reactogenicity. 77% (1912 of 2478) of infants had fever of 38·5°C or higher after any 4CMenB dose, compared with 45% (295 of 659) after routine vaccines alone and 47% (228 of 490) with MenC, but only two febrile seizures were deemed probably related to 4CMenB. INTERPRETATION 4CMenB is immunogenic in infants and children aged 12 months with no clinically relevant interference with routine vaccines, but increases reactogenicity when administered concomitantly with routine vaccines. This breakthrough vaccine offers an innovative solution to the major remaining cause of bacterial meningitis in infant and toddlers. FUNDING Novartis Vaccines and Diagnostics.


Expert Review of Vaccines | 2009

10-valent pneumococcal nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae PD conjugate vaccine: Synflorix™

Roman Prymula; Lode Schuerman

The global burden of disease due to Streptococcus pneumoniae remains high. The licensed 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (7vCRM, Prevenar™/Prevnar™) has successfully reduced invasive disease in the USA, but serotype coverage is incomplete and some evidence suggests that serotype replacement has occurred. Recently, a new 10-valent pneumococcal nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) protein D (PD) conjugate vaccine (PHiD-CV, Synflorix™) has been licensed in more than 40 countries, including Europe, for the prevention of invasive disease and acute otitis media (AOM) due to pneumococcus in infants and children. PHiD-CV is immunogenic in infants when administered as a three-dose primary vaccination in a range of schedules and has a safety profile comparable to that of 7vCRM. Additional serotypes in PHiD-CV (1, 5 and 7F) increase overall serotype coverage and improve coverage in specific age groups and against specific disease syndromes. The use of the PD carrier, which provided protection against AOM caused by NTHi in a large efficacy trial testing a prototype of the final vaccine formulation, suggests that PHiD-CV will also provide some protection against AOM due to NTHi.


Vaccine | 2009

Effect of vaccination with pneumococcal capsular polysaccharides conjugated to Haemophilus influenzae-derived protein D on nasopharyngeal carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae and H. influenzae in children under 2 years of age.

Roman Prymula; Pavla Kriz; Eva Kaliskova; Thierry Pascal; Jan Poolman; Lode Schuerman

Following primary and booster vaccination with an 11-valent pneumococcall protein D conjugate vaccine there was a 42.8% (95% CI: -16.7 to 71.9, ns) reduction in the carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae vaccine serotypes and a 42.6% (95% CI: 1.3-66.6) reduction in the carriage of Haemophilus influenzae identified by standard microbiological techniques. When PCR and immunoblot assays were used to further improve specificity of non-typeable H. influenzae strain identification, carriage of H. influenzae was still reduced with 38.6% (95% CI: -6.3 to 64.6, ns). Reduction of acute otitis media (AOM) episodes preceded the impact on carriage. These data provide further support of the functional role of the protein D immunity.


Vaccine | 2011

Impact of the 10-valent pneumococcal non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae Protein D conjugate vaccine (PHiD-CV) on bacterial nasopharyngeal carriage

Roman Prymula; Irena Hanovcová; Miroslav Splino; Pavla Kriz; Jitka Motlova; Vera Lebedova; Patricia Lommel; Eva Kaliskova; Thierry Pascal; Dorota Borys; Lode Schuerman

Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (PCV) may reduce nasopharyngeal carriage (NPC) of Streptococcus pneumoniae vaccine strains (VT), but serotype replacement with non-vaccine strains (NVT) has been reported. Bacterial NPC after PHiD-CV vaccination was assessed in the second year of life. Open descriptive study of NPC reported for 414 subjects vaccinated at 3-5 and 12-15 months of age with PHiD-CV with or without prophylactic paracetamol (PP) compared to 336 age-matched PCV-naïve controls. Carriage was assessed prior to and 1, 3, 7 and 12 months after PHiD-CV booster or MenACWY-TT control vaccination at 12-15 months of age. At each visit, carriage of VT was reduced by 22-35% in PHiD-CV recipients. Vaccine efficacy across all visits was 21.7% [95% CI 2.6; 37.0] (26.8% carriage in the PHiD-CV group versus 34.2% in controls). Carriage rates of NVT tended to be higher in PHiD-CV recipients. Pre-booster, these findings were more pronounced when PP had not been administered. No substantial effect of PHiD-CV vaccination was observed on NPC of other bacterial pathogens including non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae. Primary and booster vaccination with PHiD-CV reduced NPC of VT in the second year of life and tended to slightly increase that of NVT in line with previous experience with the 7-valent PCV.


Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics | 2014

A phase 2 randomized controlled trial of a multicomponent meningococcal serogroup B vaccine (I)

Roman Prymula; Susanna Esposito; Gian Vincenzo Zuccotti; Fang Xie; Daniela Toneatto; Igor Kohl; Peter M. Dull

The novel meningococcal serogroup B vaccine (4CMenB, Bexsero®), recently approved in Europe and Australia, may soon be included in routine infant immunization schedules, subject to guidance from national or regional recommending bodies. In the development of 4CMenB and consistent with other newly introduced vaccines, clinical studies have shown concomitant administration with routine infant vaccines induces an incremental increase in some reactions, including fever. As this may hinder acceptability, we examined the impact of prophylactic paracetamol on the occurrence of fever and other solicited reactions, as well as the immune responses to study vaccines, in a prospectively designed study. 4CMenB was administered as a 4-dose series at 2, 3, 4, and 12 months of age concomitantly with routine infant vaccines: DTaP-HBV-IPV/Hib and PCV7, with or without prophylactic paracetamol; a third group received MenC vaccine. Immune responses to 4CMenB were not decreased by the use of paracetamol prophylaxis and there were no clinically relevant effects on immune responses to routine vaccines. Occurrence of fever was higher in infants co-administered with 4CMenB compared with those given MenC vaccine, but was significantly decreased by prophylactic paracetamol, as were other solicited reactions to vaccination, both local and systemic. Co-administration of 4CMenB had an acceptable tolerability profile, with no withdrawals due to vaccination-related adverse events. Inclusion of 4CMenB in routine infant immunization schedules will be a major advance in the control of meningococcal disease, and our study indicates that by using paracetamol prophylaxis, post-vaccination reactions are reduced without clinically relevant negative consequences on vaccine immunogenicity.


Vaccine | 2009

Pneumococcal serotype 3 otitis media, limited effect of polysaccharide conjugate immunisation and strain characteristics.

Jan Poolman; Pavla Kriz; Christiane Feron; Emmanuel Di-Paolo; Isabelle Henckaerts; Agnes Miseur; Dominique Wauters; Roman Prymula; Lode Schuerman

BACKGROUND In contrast to the other vaccine serotypes, no protection could be demonstrated in the POET study against serotype 3 acute otitis media (AOM) following primary and booster vaccination with a multi-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine. METHODS AOM efficacy and immunogenicity data were reviewed. Pheno- and genotypic characteristics of different serotype 3 strains including efficacy study AOM isolates were evaluated. RESULTS Evaluation of vaccine efficacy before and after booster vaccination indicated that lack of efficacy against serotype 3 pneumococci might have been due to declined protection following the booster dose. However, although atypical immunogenicity was observed for serotype 3 in the second year of life, the capacity to respond to serotype 3 plain polysaccharide was not impaired. All but one of the serotype 3 strains examined had abundant polysaccharide capsules. Comparison of serotype 3 capsular polysaccharide biosynthesis gene sequences found no relevant differences between any of the serotype 3 strains, but mRNA transcript levels were lower for the less densely encapsulated strain. CONCLUSION Lack of clinical efficacy against serotype 3 AOM following pneumococcal conjugate vaccination may be due to an impaired induction of immune memory. A possible alternative explanation may lie with the atypically abundant expression of capsular polysaccharide which could make serotype 3 strains less susceptible to anti-polysaccharide antibody defence mechanisms in the middle ear. The occurrence of acapsular forms during biofilm growth may also play a role. Clinical impact against otitis media, of vaccines containing pneumococcal serotype 3 components, remains unclear until further investigations have demonstrated the value.

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Ioana Anca

Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy

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Darko Richter

University Hospital Centre Zagreb

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Eda Tamm

Tartu University Hospital

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