| Literature DB >> 1338783 |
K T McKee1, J G Oro, A I Kuehne, J A Spisso, B G Mahlandt.
Abstract
The protective efficacy of Candid No. 1, a live-attenuated vaccine against Argentine hemorrhagic fever (AHF), was evaluated in non-human primates. Twenty rhesus macaques immunized 3 months previously with graded doses of Candid No. 1 (16-127, 000 PFU), as well as 4 placebo-inoculated controls, were challenged with 4.41 log10 PFU of virulent P3790 strain Junin virus. All controls developed severe clinical disease; 3 of 4 died. In contrast, all vaccinated animals were fully protected; none developed any signs of AHF during a 105-day follow-up period. Viremia and virus shedding were readily detected in all placebo-vaccinated controls, while virus could be recovered only once (by amplification) from throat swabs of 2 Candid No. 1 vaccinees on day 21. Vigorous secondary-type neutralizing and immunofluorescent antibody responses were seen in most vaccinees that had received 3 log10 PFU Candid No. 1 or fewer; all others, including those receiving 127,200 PFU, maintained relatively stable titers during follow-up. Candid No. 1 was highly immunogenic and fully protective against lethal Junin virus challenge in rhesus macaques, even at extremely low (16 PFU) vaccine doses.Entities:
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Year: 1992 PMID: 1338783 DOI: 10.1159/000150276
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intervirology ISSN: 0300-5526 Impact factor: 1.763