In addition to the vaccine coverage results, a subsequent analysis of a new predictive model, “Meningococcal Antigen Typing System” (MATS), against the tested MenB strains, supported the potential benefits of a multi-component vaccine. When MATS detected that three vaccine antigens were sufficiently present on any MenB strain, 100 percent of the time these strains were killed by pooled sera from immunized adults[1]. In addition, when one or two antigens were detected to be sufficiently present on any MenB strain, 85 and 94 percent of the time, respectively, they were killed[1].
“These important findings support our innovative approach using multiple novel components in a single vaccine to provide broad coverage against the deadly and unpredictable MenB disease,” said Andrin Oswald, Head of Novartis Vaccines and Diagnostics Division. “Novartis is committed to developing a MenB vaccine that protects all age groups who are at highest risk of contracting often deadly MenB disease, especially infants and young children[2]”.
MATS is a new, simple and reproducible assay that correlates with SBA to overcome the challenge of traditional SBA testing on large collections of strains. The immense diversity and number of circulating MenB strains around the world[2] and the limited infant serum volume derived from clinical trials makes traditional testing difficult and cannot be made a routine procedure[1]. Novartis Vaccines, in collaboration with Novartis Diagnostics, developed MATS as a scientific model to predict whether MenB strains are potentially covered by the vaccine.