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Clinical trial in healthy malaria-naïve adults to evaluate the safety, tolerability, immunogenicity and efficacy of MuStDO5, a five-gene, sporozoite/hepatic stage Plasmodium falciparumDNA vaccine combined with escalating dose human GM-CSF DNA

Authors :
Richie, Thomas L.
Charoenvit, Yupin
Wang, Ruobing
Epstein, Judith E.
Hedstrom, Richard C.
Kumar, Sanjai
Luke, Thomas C.
Freilich, Daniel A.
Aguiar, Joao C.
Sacci, John B.
Sedegah, Martha
Nosek, Ronald A.
De La Vega, Patricia
Berzins, Mara P.
Majam, Victoria F.
Abot, Esteban N.
Ganeshan, Harini
Richie, Nancy O.
Banania, Jo Glenna
Baraceros, Maria Fe B.
Geter, Tanya G.
Mere, Robin
Bebris, Lolita
Limbach, Keith
Hickey, Bradley W.
Lanar, David E.
Ng, Jennifer
Shi, Meng
Hobart, Peter M.
Norman, Jon A.
Soisson, Lorraine A.
Hollingdale, Michael R.
Rogers, William O.
Doolan, Denise L.
Hoffman, Stephen L.
Source :
Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics; November 2012, Vol. 8 Issue: 11 p1564-1584, 21p
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

When introduced in the 1990s, immunization with DNA plasmids was considered potentially revolutionary for vaccine development, particularly for vaccines intended to induce protective CD8 T cell responses against multiple antigens. We conducted, in 1997−1998, the first clinical trial in healthy humans of a DNA vaccine, a single plasmid encoding Plasmodium falciparumcircumsporozoite protein (PfCSP), as an initial step toward developing a multi-antigen malaria vaccine targeting the liver stages of the parasite. As the next step, we conducted in 2000–2001 a clinical trial of a five-plasmid mixture called MuStDO5 encoding pre-erythrocytic antigens PfCSP, PfSSP2/TRAP, PfEXP1, PfLSA1 and PfLSA3. Thirty-two, malaria-naïve, adult volunteers were enrolled sequentially into four cohorts receiving a mixture of 500 μg of each plasmid plus escalating doses (0, 20, 100 or 500 μg) of a sixth plasmid encoding human granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor (hGM-CSF). Three doses of each formulation were administered intramuscularly by needle-less jet injection at 0, 4 and 8 weeks, and each cohort had controlled human malaria infection administered by five mosquito bites 18 d later. The vaccine was safe and well-tolerated, inducing moderate antigen-specific, MHC-restricted T cell interferon-γ responses but no antibodies. Although no volunteers were protected, T cell responses were boosted post malaria challenge. This trial demonstrated the MuStDO5 DNA and hGM-CSF plasmids to be safe and modestly immunogenic for T cell responses. It also laid the foundation for priming with DNA plasmids and boosting with recombinant viruses, an approach known for nearly 15 y to enhance the immunogenicity and protective efficacy of DNA vaccines.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21645515 and 2164554X
Volume :
8
Issue :
11
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs52498234
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4161/hv.22129