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Development and validation of a quantitative Orthopoxvirus immunoassay to evaluate and differentiate serological responses to Mpox infection and vaccination

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posted on 2025-03-07, 12:53 authored by Joanne Byrne, Gurvin Saini, Alejandro Garcia-Leon, Dana Alalwan, Peter Doran, Alan Landay, Liem Binh Luong Nguyen, Cathal O'Broin, Stefano Savinelli, Jane A O'Halloran, Aoife Cotter, Mary Horgan, Christine Kelly, Corinna Sadlier, Eoghan De BarraEoghan De Barra, Virginie Gautier, Patrick W G Mallon, Eoin R Feeney, All Ireland Infectious Diseases Cohort Study

Background: The Mpox outbreak, caused by Monkeypox virus (MPXV), underscores the need for a serological assay to assess Mpox immunity. Modified Vaccinia Ankara (MVA) vaccine, an attenuated vaccinia virus (VACV), is authorised for Mpox prevention. We aimed to develop a quantitative immunoassay to differentiate infection- and vaccination-induced immunity and explore serological responses to Mpox infection and vaccination.

Methods: We evaluated an electrochemiluminescence assay targeting IgG to 10 MPXV and 3 VACV antigens in plasma from adults in a cohort study with previous Mpox, MVA-vaccination, or historical controls. Sensitivity and specificity to distinguish i) seropositive versus naive and ii) infection- versus vaccination-induced seropositivity were determined using ROC curves. Antibody kinetics were analysed with generalised additive models.

Findings: Eight of the thirteen IgG antibodies showed significant titre differences across groups identifying three key antigens: MPXVB6R, MPXVA27L, and VACVB5. A VACVB5 IgG titre of 0.082 IgG normalised units (nu) offered 74% (95% CI: 59-82%) sensitivity and 81% (73-96%) specificity for previous antigen exposure (infection or vaccine). For infection alone, an MPXVB6R IgG titre of 0.075 IgGnu provided 89% (82-98%) sensitivity and 94% (86-100%) specificity. To differentiate infection from vaccination-induced seropositivity, the sum of MPXVA27L IgG and the B6R/VACVB5 ratio provided 89% (80-96%) sensitivity and 80% (74-84%) specificity. VACVB5 IgG titres declined over time, with higher titres post-Mpox than post-vaccination (p < 0.0001).

Interpretation: This assay demonstrates high sensitivity and specificity in quantifying and differentiating between antibody responses to Mpox infection and vaccination. Post-Mpox antibody responses were higher than post-vaccination, though both waned over time.

Funding

Health Research Board (MONKEYVAX-2022-1)

University College Dublin School of Medicine

History

Data Availability Statement

The data used for this analysis can be made available upon reasonable request to the corresponding author.

Comments

The original article is available at https://www.thelancet.com/

Published Citation

Byrne J, et al. Development and validation of a quantitative Orthopoxvirus immunoassay to evaluate and differentiate serological responses to Mpox infection and vaccination. EBioMedicine. 2025;113:105622.

Publication Date

22 February 2025

PubMed ID

39987746

Department/Unit

  • Beaumont Hospital
  • International Health and Tropical Medicine

Publisher

Elsevier B.V.

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)