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A modified Shigella volunteer challenge model in which the inoculum is administered with bicarbonate buffer: clinical experience and implications for Shigella infectivity

Authors :
Thomas L. Hale
Genevieve Losonsky
Karen L. Kotloff
David N. Taylor
Steven S. Wasserman
Myron M. Levine
James P. Nataro
Jerald C. Sadoff
Source :
Vaccine. 13:1488-1494
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1995.

Abstract

In the absence of a definitive immunologic correlate of protection against shigellosis, promising Shigella vaccine candidates have been selected based on their ability to confer resistance against experimental challenge with wild-type Shigella in healthy adult volunteers. A limitation of this model has been the low and often variable attack rate of illness among controls, necessitating repeated inpatient studies to demonstrate statistically significant results. In this study, the Shigella challenge model was modified by using bicarbonate buffer instead of skimmed milk as the delivery vehicle to enhance survival of the ingested challenge inoculum. To determine the ability of the modified model to detect protective efficacy, 11 veteran volunteers (previously challenged with S. flexneri 2a in bicarbonate buffer) and 12 immunologically naive control subjects were challenged with 1.4 x 10(3) c.f.u. S. flexneri 2a. Shigellosis occurred in 3 veterans and 11 control subjects (27 vs 92%, p = 0.003), yielding a protective efficacy of 70%. Dose response was evaluated in an additional seven naive subjects who were inoculated with a log lower (1.4 x 10(2) c.f.u.) S. flexneri 2a and had a significantly diminished attack rate of shigellosis (317 (43%) vs 11/12 (92%), p = 0.04). These findings indicate that the modified bicarbonate challenge model using an inoculum of 10(3) c.f.u. is a safe, repeatable, and valid method of selecting Shigella vaccines and other immunoprophylactic agents that are likely to confer protection against natural shigellosis.

Details

ISSN :
0264410X
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Vaccine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d45c7317aad03b2069d7fae4435d3997
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/0264-410x(95)00102-7