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Vaccine Potentiation by Combination Adjuvants

Adjuvants are crucial components of vaccines. They significantly improve vaccine efficacy by modulating, enhancing, or extending the immune response and at the same time reducing the amount of antigen needed. In contrast to previously licensed adjuvants, current successful adjuvant formulations ofte...

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Autores principales: Levast, Benoît, Awate, Sunita, Babiuk, Lorne, Mutwiri, George, Gerdts, Volker, van Drunen Littel-van den Hurk, Sylvia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4494260/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26344621
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines2020297
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author Levast, Benoît
Awate, Sunita
Babiuk, Lorne
Mutwiri, George
Gerdts, Volker
van Drunen Littel-van den Hurk, Sylvia
author_facet Levast, Benoît
Awate, Sunita
Babiuk, Lorne
Mutwiri, George
Gerdts, Volker
van Drunen Littel-van den Hurk, Sylvia
author_sort Levast, Benoît
collection PubMed
description Adjuvants are crucial components of vaccines. They significantly improve vaccine efficacy by modulating, enhancing, or extending the immune response and at the same time reducing the amount of antigen needed. In contrast to previously licensed adjuvants, current successful adjuvant formulations often consist of several molecules, that when combined, act synergistically by activating a variety of immune mechanisms. These “combination adjuvants” are already registered with several vaccines, both in humans and animals, and novel combination adjuvants are in the pipeline. With improved knowledge of the type of immune responses needed to successfully induce disease protection by vaccination, combination adjuvants are particularly suited to not only enhance, but also direct the immune responses desired to be either Th1-, Th2- or Th17-biased. Indeed, in view of the variety of disease and population targets for vaccine development, a panel of adjuvants will be needed to address different disease targets and populations. Here, we will review well-known and new combination adjuvants already licensed or currently in development—including ISCOMs, liposomes, Adjuvant Systems Montanides, and triple adjuvant combinations—and summarize their performance in preclinical and clinical trials. Several of these combination adjuvants are promising having promoted improved and balanced immune responses.
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spelling pubmed-44942602015-08-31 Vaccine Potentiation by Combination Adjuvants Levast, Benoît Awate, Sunita Babiuk, Lorne Mutwiri, George Gerdts, Volker van Drunen Littel-van den Hurk, Sylvia Vaccines (Basel) Review Adjuvants are crucial components of vaccines. They significantly improve vaccine efficacy by modulating, enhancing, or extending the immune response and at the same time reducing the amount of antigen needed. In contrast to previously licensed adjuvants, current successful adjuvant formulations often consist of several molecules, that when combined, act synergistically by activating a variety of immune mechanisms. These “combination adjuvants” are already registered with several vaccines, both in humans and animals, and novel combination adjuvants are in the pipeline. With improved knowledge of the type of immune responses needed to successfully induce disease protection by vaccination, combination adjuvants are particularly suited to not only enhance, but also direct the immune responses desired to be either Th1-, Th2- or Th17-biased. Indeed, in view of the variety of disease and population targets for vaccine development, a panel of adjuvants will be needed to address different disease targets and populations. Here, we will review well-known and new combination adjuvants already licensed or currently in development—including ISCOMs, liposomes, Adjuvant Systems Montanides, and triple adjuvant combinations—and summarize their performance in preclinical and clinical trials. Several of these combination adjuvants are promising having promoted improved and balanced immune responses. MDPI 2014-04-14 /pmc/articles/PMC4494260/ /pubmed/26344621 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines2020297 Text en © 2014 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Levast, Benoît
Awate, Sunita
Babiuk, Lorne
Mutwiri, George
Gerdts, Volker
van Drunen Littel-van den Hurk, Sylvia
Vaccine Potentiation by Combination Adjuvants
title Vaccine Potentiation by Combination Adjuvants
title_full Vaccine Potentiation by Combination Adjuvants
title_fullStr Vaccine Potentiation by Combination Adjuvants
title_full_unstemmed Vaccine Potentiation by Combination Adjuvants
title_short Vaccine Potentiation by Combination Adjuvants
title_sort vaccine potentiation by combination adjuvants
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4494260/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26344621
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines2020297
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