30-Minute Highly Multiplexed Vaxarray Immunoassay for Pneumococcal Vaccine Antigen Characterization

26 Pages Posted: 6 Oct 2022

See all articles by Tianjing Hu

Tianjing Hu

InDevR Inc.

David F. Miller

InDevR Inc.

Amber W. Taylor

InDevR Inc.

Christine Riley

InDevR Inc.

Caitlin McCormick

InDevR Inc.

Keely N. Thomas

InDevR Inc.

Rachel Y. Gao

InDevR Inc.

Kathy L. Rowlen

InDevR Inc.

Emilia B. Byrne

Pfizer Inc.

Pardeep Kumar

Pfizer Inc.

Soo Kyung Kim

EuBiologics R&D Center

Erica Dawson

InDevR Inc.

Abstract

Pneumonia accounts for over 20% of deaths worldwide in children aged 1 to 5 years, disproportionately affecting lower- and middle-income countries.  Effective, highly multivalent pneumococcal vaccines are available to decrease disease burden, with numerous new vaccines currently under development to serve a variety of worldwide markets. However, pneumococcal conjugate vaccines are among the hardest biologics to manufacture and characterize due to their complexity and heterogeneity. Current characterization methods are often inherently singleplex, requiring separate tests for each serotype present.  In addition, identity and quantity are often determined with separate methods.  We have developed the VaxArray Pneumococcal Assay for applications in identity, quantity, and stability testing of pneumococcal polysaccharide and pneumococcal conjugate vaccines.  The VaxArray Pneumococcal Assay has a time to result of less than 30 minutes and is an off-the-shelf multiplexed, microarray-based immunoassay kit that can identify and simultaneously quantify 23 pneumococcal polysaccharide serotypes common to many on-market and in-development vaccines.  Here, we highlight the potential of the assay for identity testing by showing high reactivity and serotype-specificity to a wide variety of native polysaccharides, CRM197-conjugated polysaccharides, and drug product. The assay also has vaccine-relevant lower limits of quantification in the low to mid ng/mL range and can be used for accurate quantification even in adjuvanted vaccines.  Excellent correlation to the anthrone assay is demonstrated, with VaxArray resulting in significantly improved precision over this antiquated chemical method.

Note:

Funding Information: This work was supported, in whole or in part, by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Declaration of Interests: K. Rowlen and E. Dawson are InDevR Inc. stockholders. All other authors are employed by their respective affiliates but have no conflicts of interest.

Keywords: Pneumococcal Polysaccharide Vaccine, Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine, CRM197, Identity Testing, Antigen Quantification, Vaccine Characterization, Multiplexed Immunoassay, Microarray, VaxArray

Suggested Citation

Hu, Tianjing and Miller, David F. and Taylor, Amber W. and Riley, Christine and McCormick, Caitlin and Thomas, Keely N. and Gao, Rachel Y. and Rowlen, Kathy L. and Byrne, Emilia B. and Kumar, Pardeep and Kim, Soo Kyung and Dawson, Erica, 30-Minute Highly Multiplexed Vaxarray Immunoassay for Pneumococcal Vaccine Antigen Characterization. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4235108

Tianjing Hu

InDevR Inc. ( email )

David F. Miller

InDevR Inc. ( email )

Amber W. Taylor

InDevR Inc. ( email )

Christine Riley

InDevR Inc. ( email )

Caitlin McCormick

InDevR Inc. ( email )

Keely N. Thomas

InDevR Inc. ( email )

Rachel Y. Gao

InDevR Inc. ( email )

Kathy L. Rowlen

InDevR Inc. ( email )

Emilia B. Byrne

Pfizer Inc. ( email )

Pardeep Kumar

Pfizer Inc. ( email )

Soo Kyung Kim

EuBiologics R&D Center ( email )

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