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Experimental Human Pneumococcal Carriage

Experimental human pneumococcal carriage (EHPC) is scientifically important because nasopharyngeal carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae is both the major source of transmission and the prerequisite of invasive disease. A model of carriage will allow accurate determination of the immunological correl...

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Autores principales: Gritzfeld, Jenna F., Wright, Angie D., Collins, Andrea M., Pennington, Shaun H., Wright, Adam K.A., Kadioglu, Aras, Ferreira, Daniela M., Gordon, Stephen B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MyJove Corporation 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3601207/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23439027
http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/50115
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author Gritzfeld, Jenna F.
Wright, Angie D.
Collins, Andrea M.
Pennington, Shaun H.
Wright, Adam K.A.
Kadioglu, Aras
Ferreira, Daniela M.
Gordon, Stephen B.
author_facet Gritzfeld, Jenna F.
Wright, Angie D.
Collins, Andrea M.
Pennington, Shaun H.
Wright, Adam K.A.
Kadioglu, Aras
Ferreira, Daniela M.
Gordon, Stephen B.
author_sort Gritzfeld, Jenna F.
collection PubMed
description Experimental human pneumococcal carriage (EHPC) is scientifically important because nasopharyngeal carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae is both the major source of transmission and the prerequisite of invasive disease. A model of carriage will allow accurate determination of the immunological correlates of protection, the immunizing effect of carriage and the effect of host pressure on the pathogen in the nasopharyngeal niche. Further, methods of carriage detection useful in epidemiologic studies, including vaccine studies, can be compared. AIM: We aim to develop an EHPC platform that is a safe and useful reproducible method that could be used to down-select candidate novel pneumococcal vaccines with prevention of carriage as a surrogate of vaccine induced immunity. It will work towards testing of candidate vaccines and descriptions of the mechanisms underlying EHPC and vaccine protection from carriage(1). Current conjugate vaccines against pneumococcus protect children from invasive disease although new vaccines are urgently needed as the current vaccine does not confer optimal protection against non-bacteraemic pneumonia and there has been evidence of serotype replacement with non-vaccine serotypes(2-4). METHOD: We inoculate with S. pneumoniae suspended in 100 μl of saline. Safety is a major factor in the development of the EHPC model and is achieved through intensive volunteer screening and monitoring. A safety committee consisting of clinicians and scientists that are independent from the study provides objective feedback on a weekly basis. The bacterial inoculum is standardized and requires that no animal products are inoculated into volunteers (vegetable-based media and saline). The doses required for colonization (10(4)-10(5)) are much lower than those used in animal models (10(7))(5). Detecting pneumococcal carriage is enhanced by a high volume (ideally >10 ml) nasal wash that is relatively mucus free. This protocol will deal with the most important parts of the protocol in turn. These are (a) volunteer selection, (b) pneumococcal inoculum preparation, (c) inoculation, (d) follow-up and (e) carriage detection. RESULTS: Our current protocol has been safe in over 100 volunteers at a range of doses using two different bacterial serotypes(6). A dose ranging study using S. pneumoniae 6B and 23F is currently being conducted to determine the optimal inoculation dose for 50% carriage. A predicted 50% rate of carriage will allow the EHPC model to have high sensitivity for vaccine efficacy with small study numbers.
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spelling pubmed-36012072013-03-20 Experimental Human Pneumococcal Carriage Gritzfeld, Jenna F. Wright, Angie D. Collins, Andrea M. Pennington, Shaun H. Wright, Adam K.A. Kadioglu, Aras Ferreira, Daniela M. Gordon, Stephen B. J Vis Exp Infection Experimental human pneumococcal carriage (EHPC) is scientifically important because nasopharyngeal carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae is both the major source of transmission and the prerequisite of invasive disease. A model of carriage will allow accurate determination of the immunological correlates of protection, the immunizing effect of carriage and the effect of host pressure on the pathogen in the nasopharyngeal niche. Further, methods of carriage detection useful in epidemiologic studies, including vaccine studies, can be compared. AIM: We aim to develop an EHPC platform that is a safe and useful reproducible method that could be used to down-select candidate novel pneumococcal vaccines with prevention of carriage as a surrogate of vaccine induced immunity. It will work towards testing of candidate vaccines and descriptions of the mechanisms underlying EHPC and vaccine protection from carriage(1). Current conjugate vaccines against pneumococcus protect children from invasive disease although new vaccines are urgently needed as the current vaccine does not confer optimal protection against non-bacteraemic pneumonia and there has been evidence of serotype replacement with non-vaccine serotypes(2-4). METHOD: We inoculate with S. pneumoniae suspended in 100 μl of saline. Safety is a major factor in the development of the EHPC model and is achieved through intensive volunteer screening and monitoring. A safety committee consisting of clinicians and scientists that are independent from the study provides objective feedback on a weekly basis. The bacterial inoculum is standardized and requires that no animal products are inoculated into volunteers (vegetable-based media and saline). The doses required for colonization (10(4)-10(5)) are much lower than those used in animal models (10(7))(5). Detecting pneumococcal carriage is enhanced by a high volume (ideally >10 ml) nasal wash that is relatively mucus free. This protocol will deal with the most important parts of the protocol in turn. These are (a) volunteer selection, (b) pneumococcal inoculum preparation, (c) inoculation, (d) follow-up and (e) carriage detection. RESULTS: Our current protocol has been safe in over 100 volunteers at a range of doses using two different bacterial serotypes(6). A dose ranging study using S. pneumoniae 6B and 23F is currently being conducted to determine the optimal inoculation dose for 50% carriage. A predicted 50% rate of carriage will allow the EHPC model to have high sensitivity for vaccine efficacy with small study numbers. MyJove Corporation 2013-02-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3601207/ /pubmed/23439027 http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/50115 Text en Copyright © 2013, Journal of Visualized Experiments http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visithttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
spellingShingle Infection
Gritzfeld, Jenna F.
Wright, Angie D.
Collins, Andrea M.
Pennington, Shaun H.
Wright, Adam K.A.
Kadioglu, Aras
Ferreira, Daniela M.
Gordon, Stephen B.
Experimental Human Pneumococcal Carriage
title Experimental Human Pneumococcal Carriage
title_full Experimental Human Pneumococcal Carriage
title_fullStr Experimental Human Pneumococcal Carriage
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Human Pneumococcal Carriage
title_short Experimental Human Pneumococcal Carriage
title_sort experimental human pneumococcal carriage
topic Infection
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3601207/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23439027
http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/50115
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