Cargando…

167. A Bordetella pertussis Human Challenge Model Induces Immunizing Colonization in the Absence of Symptoms

BACKGROUND: Bordetella pertussis is one of the leading causes of vaccine preventable death and morbidity globally. Over the last 20 years, pertussis has resurged worldwide, even in territories with high immunization coverage. To improve vaccine strategies, a greater understanding of human B. pertuss...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Graaf, Hans De, Ibrahim, Muktar, Hill, Alison, Gbesemete, Diane, Gorringe, Andrew, Diavatopoulos, Dimitri, Kester, Kent, Berbers, Guy, Faust, Saul, Read, Robert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6252711/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy209.037
_version_ 1783373326701297664
author Graaf, Hans De
Ibrahim, Muktar
Hill, Alison
Gbesemete, Diane
Gorringe, Andrew
Diavatopoulos, Dimitri
Kester, Kent
Berbers, Guy
Faust, Saul
Read, Robert
author_facet Graaf, Hans De
Ibrahim, Muktar
Hill, Alison
Gbesemete, Diane
Gorringe, Andrew
Diavatopoulos, Dimitri
Kester, Kent
Berbers, Guy
Faust, Saul
Read, Robert
author_sort Graaf, Hans De
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Bordetella pertussis is one of the leading causes of vaccine preventable death and morbidity globally. Over the last 20 years, pertussis has resurged worldwide, even in territories with high immunization coverage. To improve vaccine strategies, a greater understanding of human B. pertussis infection and immunity is required. This study aims to develop a safe controlled human B. pertussis infection model and to define natural immune responses against wild-type B. pertussis in order to facilitate the development of bioassays and next-generation pertussis vaccines. METHODS: In this first-in-human controlled infection model, healthy volunteers aged 18–45 years with an anti-pertussis toxin (PT) IgG level of <20 IU/mL were inoculated intranasally with B. pertussis strain B1917. Safety, colonization, and shedding were monitored over a 17-day inpatient period. Colonization was assessed by culture and qPCR of nasal washes and nasopharyngeal swabs. Azithromycin eradication therapy was commenced on day 14. The dose of inoculum was escalated to optimize colonization rate, expressed as the percentage of volunteers colonized at any sampling point between day 3 and 14. The immunological response is being assessed at various time points over 1 year. RESULTS: 24 volunteers were challenged in groups of 4–5. The dose was gradually escalated from 10(3) colony forming units (cfu) to 10(5) cfu. Colonization rate ranged from 0% (dose 10(3) cfu) to 80% (10(5) cfu). Amongst this initial cohort, no significant safety concerns or symptoms attributed to B. pertussis disease were reported. Eradication was achieved by 48 hours in 100% of colonized volunteers. At least 4-fold rise in anti-PT IgG by day 28 in comparison to baseline was observed in 5 out of 8 volunteers who had >1,000 cfu/mL viable B. pertussis in the nasal wash and in one volunteer without detectable colonization. Nasal wash cultures were more sensitive in detecting colonization than nasopharyngeal swab cultures. No shedding of B. pertussis was detected in systematically collected environmental samples. CONCLUSION: This is the first study to demonstrate safe deliberate induction of B. pertussis colonization. It shows that asymptomatic B. pertussis colonization occurs and causes a systemic immune response. The model that we have developed will be a valuable tool to further investigate B. pertussis colonization and vaccine development. DISCLOSURES: K. Kester, Sanofi: Employee, Salary. S. Faust, Pfizer, Merck, Sanofi, AstraZeneca/Medimmune: Scientific Advisor, all honoraria paid to institution with no personal payments of any kind.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6252711
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-62527112018-11-28 167. A Bordetella pertussis Human Challenge Model Induces Immunizing Colonization in the Absence of Symptoms Graaf, Hans De Ibrahim, Muktar Hill, Alison Gbesemete, Diane Gorringe, Andrew Diavatopoulos, Dimitri Kester, Kent Berbers, Guy Faust, Saul Read, Robert Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: Bordetella pertussis is one of the leading causes of vaccine preventable death and morbidity globally. Over the last 20 years, pertussis has resurged worldwide, even in territories with high immunization coverage. To improve vaccine strategies, a greater understanding of human B. pertussis infection and immunity is required. This study aims to develop a safe controlled human B. pertussis infection model and to define natural immune responses against wild-type B. pertussis in order to facilitate the development of bioassays and next-generation pertussis vaccines. METHODS: In this first-in-human controlled infection model, healthy volunteers aged 18–45 years with an anti-pertussis toxin (PT) IgG level of <20 IU/mL were inoculated intranasally with B. pertussis strain B1917. Safety, colonization, and shedding were monitored over a 17-day inpatient period. Colonization was assessed by culture and qPCR of nasal washes and nasopharyngeal swabs. Azithromycin eradication therapy was commenced on day 14. The dose of inoculum was escalated to optimize colonization rate, expressed as the percentage of volunteers colonized at any sampling point between day 3 and 14. The immunological response is being assessed at various time points over 1 year. RESULTS: 24 volunteers were challenged in groups of 4–5. The dose was gradually escalated from 10(3) colony forming units (cfu) to 10(5) cfu. Colonization rate ranged from 0% (dose 10(3) cfu) to 80% (10(5) cfu). Amongst this initial cohort, no significant safety concerns or symptoms attributed to B. pertussis disease were reported. Eradication was achieved by 48 hours in 100% of colonized volunteers. At least 4-fold rise in anti-PT IgG by day 28 in comparison to baseline was observed in 5 out of 8 volunteers who had >1,000 cfu/mL viable B. pertussis in the nasal wash and in one volunteer without detectable colonization. Nasal wash cultures were more sensitive in detecting colonization than nasopharyngeal swab cultures. No shedding of B. pertussis was detected in systematically collected environmental samples. CONCLUSION: This is the first study to demonstrate safe deliberate induction of B. pertussis colonization. It shows that asymptomatic B. pertussis colonization occurs and causes a systemic immune response. The model that we have developed will be a valuable tool to further investigate B. pertussis colonization and vaccine development. DISCLOSURES: K. Kester, Sanofi: Employee, Salary. S. Faust, Pfizer, Merck, Sanofi, AstraZeneca/Medimmune: Scientific Advisor, all honoraria paid to institution with no personal payments of any kind. Oxford University Press 2018-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6252711/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy209.037 Text en © The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Graaf, Hans De
Ibrahim, Muktar
Hill, Alison
Gbesemete, Diane
Gorringe, Andrew
Diavatopoulos, Dimitri
Kester, Kent
Berbers, Guy
Faust, Saul
Read, Robert
167. A Bordetella pertussis Human Challenge Model Induces Immunizing Colonization in the Absence of Symptoms
title 167. A Bordetella pertussis Human Challenge Model Induces Immunizing Colonization in the Absence of Symptoms
title_full 167. A Bordetella pertussis Human Challenge Model Induces Immunizing Colonization in the Absence of Symptoms
title_fullStr 167. A Bordetella pertussis Human Challenge Model Induces Immunizing Colonization in the Absence of Symptoms
title_full_unstemmed 167. A Bordetella pertussis Human Challenge Model Induces Immunizing Colonization in the Absence of Symptoms
title_short 167. A Bordetella pertussis Human Challenge Model Induces Immunizing Colonization in the Absence of Symptoms
title_sort 167. a bordetella pertussis human challenge model induces immunizing colonization in the absence of symptoms
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6252711/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy209.037
work_keys_str_mv AT graafhansde 167abordetellapertussishumanchallengemodelinducesimmunizingcolonizationintheabsenceofsymptoms
AT ibrahimmuktar 167abordetellapertussishumanchallengemodelinducesimmunizingcolonizationintheabsenceofsymptoms
AT hillalison 167abordetellapertussishumanchallengemodelinducesimmunizingcolonizationintheabsenceofsymptoms
AT gbesemetediane 167abordetellapertussishumanchallengemodelinducesimmunizingcolonizationintheabsenceofsymptoms
AT gorringeandrew 167abordetellapertussishumanchallengemodelinducesimmunizingcolonizationintheabsenceofsymptoms
AT diavatopoulosdimitri 167abordetellapertussishumanchallengemodelinducesimmunizingcolonizationintheabsenceofsymptoms
AT kesterkent 167abordetellapertussishumanchallengemodelinducesimmunizingcolonizationintheabsenceofsymptoms
AT berbersguy 167abordetellapertussishumanchallengemodelinducesimmunizingcolonizationintheabsenceofsymptoms
AT faustsaul 167abordetellapertussishumanchallengemodelinducesimmunizingcolonizationintheabsenceofsymptoms
AT readrobert 167abordetellapertussishumanchallengemodelinducesimmunizingcolonizationintheabsenceofsymptoms