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Impact on Malaria Parasite Multiplication Rates in Infected Volunteers of the Protein-in-Adjuvant Vaccine AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+CPG 7909

BACKGROUND: Inhibition of parasite growth is a major objective of blood-stage malaria vaccines. The in vitro assay of parasite growth inhibitory activity (GIA) is widely used as a surrogate marker for malaria vaccine efficacy in the down-selection of candidate blood-stage vaccines. Here we report th...

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Autores principales: Duncan, Christopher J. A., Sheehy, Susanne H., Ewer, Katie J., Douglas, Alexander D., Collins, Katharine A., Halstead, Fenella D., Elias, Sean C., Lillie, Patrick J., Rausch, Kelly, Aebig, Joan, Miura, Kazutoyo, Edwards, Nick J., Poulton, Ian D., Hunt-Cooke, Angela, Porter, David W., Thompson, Fiona M., Rowland, Ros, Draper, Simon J., Gilbert, Sarah C., Fay, Michael P., Long, Carole A., Zhu, Daming, Wu, Yimin, Martin, Laura B., Anderson, Charles F., Lawrie, Alison M., Hill, Adrian V. S., Ellis, Ruth D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3142129/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21799809
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0022271
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author Duncan, Christopher J. A.
Sheehy, Susanne H.
Ewer, Katie J.
Douglas, Alexander D.
Collins, Katharine A.
Halstead, Fenella D.
Elias, Sean C.
Lillie, Patrick J.
Rausch, Kelly
Aebig, Joan
Miura, Kazutoyo
Edwards, Nick J.
Poulton, Ian D.
Hunt-Cooke, Angela
Porter, David W.
Thompson, Fiona M.
Rowland, Ros
Draper, Simon J.
Gilbert, Sarah C.
Fay, Michael P.
Long, Carole A.
Zhu, Daming
Wu, Yimin
Martin, Laura B.
Anderson, Charles F.
Lawrie, Alison M.
Hill, Adrian V. S.
Ellis, Ruth D.
author_facet Duncan, Christopher J. A.
Sheehy, Susanne H.
Ewer, Katie J.
Douglas, Alexander D.
Collins, Katharine A.
Halstead, Fenella D.
Elias, Sean C.
Lillie, Patrick J.
Rausch, Kelly
Aebig, Joan
Miura, Kazutoyo
Edwards, Nick J.
Poulton, Ian D.
Hunt-Cooke, Angela
Porter, David W.
Thompson, Fiona M.
Rowland, Ros
Draper, Simon J.
Gilbert, Sarah C.
Fay, Michael P.
Long, Carole A.
Zhu, Daming
Wu, Yimin
Martin, Laura B.
Anderson, Charles F.
Lawrie, Alison M.
Hill, Adrian V. S.
Ellis, Ruth D.
author_sort Duncan, Christopher J. A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Inhibition of parasite growth is a major objective of blood-stage malaria vaccines. The in vitro assay of parasite growth inhibitory activity (GIA) is widely used as a surrogate marker for malaria vaccine efficacy in the down-selection of candidate blood-stage vaccines. Here we report the first study to examine the relationship between in vivo Plasmodium falciparum growth rates and in vitro GIA in humans experimentally infected with blood-stage malaria. METHODS: In this phase I/IIa open-label clinical trial five healthy malaria-naive volunteers were immunised with AMA1/C1-Alhydrogel+CPG 7909, and together with three unvaccinated controls were challenged by intravenous inoculation of P. falciparum infected erythrocytes. RESULTS: A significant correlation was observed between parasite multiplication rate in 48 hours (PMR) and both vaccine-induced growth-inhibitory activity (Pearson r = −0.93 [95% CI: −1.0, −0.27] P = 0.02) and AMA1 antibody titres in the vaccine group (Pearson r = −0.93 [95% CI: −0.99, −0.25] P = 0.02). However immunisation failed to reduce overall mean PMR in the vaccine group in comparison to the controls (vaccinee 16 fold [95% CI: 12, 22], control 17 fold [CI: 0, 65] P = 0.70). Therefore no impact on pre-patent period was observed (vaccine group median 8.5 days [range 7.5–9], control group median 9 days [range 7–9]). CONCLUSIONS: Despite the first observation in human experimental malaria infection of a significant association between vaccine-induced in vitro growth inhibitory activity and in vivo parasite multiplication rate, this did not translate into any observable clinically relevant vaccine effect in this small group of volunteers. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov [NCT00984763]
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spelling pubmed-31421292011-07-28 Impact on Malaria Parasite Multiplication Rates in Infected Volunteers of the Protein-in-Adjuvant Vaccine AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+CPG 7909 Duncan, Christopher J. A. Sheehy, Susanne H. Ewer, Katie J. Douglas, Alexander D. Collins, Katharine A. Halstead, Fenella D. Elias, Sean C. Lillie, Patrick J. Rausch, Kelly Aebig, Joan Miura, Kazutoyo Edwards, Nick J. Poulton, Ian D. Hunt-Cooke, Angela Porter, David W. Thompson, Fiona M. Rowland, Ros Draper, Simon J. Gilbert, Sarah C. Fay, Michael P. Long, Carole A. Zhu, Daming Wu, Yimin Martin, Laura B. Anderson, Charles F. Lawrie, Alison M. Hill, Adrian V. S. Ellis, Ruth D. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Inhibition of parasite growth is a major objective of blood-stage malaria vaccines. The in vitro assay of parasite growth inhibitory activity (GIA) is widely used as a surrogate marker for malaria vaccine efficacy in the down-selection of candidate blood-stage vaccines. Here we report the first study to examine the relationship between in vivo Plasmodium falciparum growth rates and in vitro GIA in humans experimentally infected with blood-stage malaria. METHODS: In this phase I/IIa open-label clinical trial five healthy malaria-naive volunteers were immunised with AMA1/C1-Alhydrogel+CPG 7909, and together with three unvaccinated controls were challenged by intravenous inoculation of P. falciparum infected erythrocytes. RESULTS: A significant correlation was observed between parasite multiplication rate in 48 hours (PMR) and both vaccine-induced growth-inhibitory activity (Pearson r = −0.93 [95% CI: −1.0, −0.27] P = 0.02) and AMA1 antibody titres in the vaccine group (Pearson r = −0.93 [95% CI: −0.99, −0.25] P = 0.02). However immunisation failed to reduce overall mean PMR in the vaccine group in comparison to the controls (vaccinee 16 fold [95% CI: 12, 22], control 17 fold [CI: 0, 65] P = 0.70). Therefore no impact on pre-patent period was observed (vaccine group median 8.5 days [range 7.5–9], control group median 9 days [range 7–9]). CONCLUSIONS: Despite the first observation in human experimental malaria infection of a significant association between vaccine-induced in vitro growth inhibitory activity and in vivo parasite multiplication rate, this did not translate into any observable clinically relevant vaccine effect in this small group of volunteers. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov [NCT00984763] Public Library of Science 2011-07-22 /pmc/articles/PMC3142129/ /pubmed/21799809 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0022271 Text en This is an open-access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Duncan, Christopher J. A.
Sheehy, Susanne H.
Ewer, Katie J.
Douglas, Alexander D.
Collins, Katharine A.
Halstead, Fenella D.
Elias, Sean C.
Lillie, Patrick J.
Rausch, Kelly
Aebig, Joan
Miura, Kazutoyo
Edwards, Nick J.
Poulton, Ian D.
Hunt-Cooke, Angela
Porter, David W.
Thompson, Fiona M.
Rowland, Ros
Draper, Simon J.
Gilbert, Sarah C.
Fay, Michael P.
Long, Carole A.
Zhu, Daming
Wu, Yimin
Martin, Laura B.
Anderson, Charles F.
Lawrie, Alison M.
Hill, Adrian V. S.
Ellis, Ruth D.
Impact on Malaria Parasite Multiplication Rates in Infected Volunteers of the Protein-in-Adjuvant Vaccine AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+CPG 7909
title Impact on Malaria Parasite Multiplication Rates in Infected Volunteers of the Protein-in-Adjuvant Vaccine AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+CPG 7909
title_full Impact on Malaria Parasite Multiplication Rates in Infected Volunteers of the Protein-in-Adjuvant Vaccine AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+CPG 7909
title_fullStr Impact on Malaria Parasite Multiplication Rates in Infected Volunteers of the Protein-in-Adjuvant Vaccine AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+CPG 7909
title_full_unstemmed Impact on Malaria Parasite Multiplication Rates in Infected Volunteers of the Protein-in-Adjuvant Vaccine AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+CPG 7909
title_short Impact on Malaria Parasite Multiplication Rates in Infected Volunteers of the Protein-in-Adjuvant Vaccine AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+CPG 7909
title_sort impact on malaria parasite multiplication rates in infected volunteers of the protein-in-adjuvant vaccine ama1-c1/alhydrogel+cpg 7909
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3142129/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21799809
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0022271
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