| Literature DB >> 21876771 |
M Keith Howard1, Nicolas Sabarth, Helga Savidis-Dacho, Daniel Portsmouth, Otfried Kistner, Thomas R Kreil, Hartmut J Ehrlich, P Noel Barrett.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vero cell culture-derived whole-virus H5N1 vaccines have been extensively tested in clinical trials and consistently demonstrated to be safe and immunogenic; however, clinical efficacy is difficult to evaluate in the absence of wide-spread human disease. A lethal mouse model has been utilized which allows investigation of the protective efficacy of active vaccination or passive transfer of vaccine induced sera following lethal H5N1 challenge.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21876771 PMCID: PMC3158096 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0023791
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Prolongation of survival of passively immunized mice following challenge with wild-type H5N1 virus.
Groups of 7 or 10 CD1 mice received immune sera from (A) CD1 mice, (B) guinea pigs or (C) humans and survival was monitored for 14 days. Shown are the mean % of surviving animals each day following lethal challenge. Reciprocal neutralizing antibody titers shown are the means extrapolated from titers measured immediately prior to challenge. N = Naive serum. All mice receiving mouse immune sera of mean titer ≥1∶16 and guinea pig immune sera of mean titer ≥ 1∶43 were protected.
Dose-dependent protective efficacy of H5N1 vaccine-induced immune sera in mice.
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| 40 | 31 | 33 | 20/20 (100) |
| 20 | 19 | 16 | 20/20 (100) | |
| 10 | <9.4 | 8 | 13/20 (65) | |
| 5 | <9.4 | 4 | 9/20 (45) | |
| naive | <9.4 | n.a. | 3/20 (15) | |
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| 160 | 170 | 171 | 20/20 (100) |
| 80 | 86 | 86 | 20/20 (100) | |
| 40 | 45 | 43 | 20/20 (100) | |
| 20 | 20 | 21 | 19/20 (95) | |
| 10 | 11 | 11 | 11/20 (55) | |
| 5 | <9.4 | 5 | 5/20 (25) | |
| 2.5 | <9.4 | 3 | 8/20 (40) | |
| naive | <9.4 | n.a. | 3/20 (15) | |
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| 80 | 28 | 29 | 7/10 (70) |
| 50 | 17 | 15 | 20/30 (67) | |
| 38 | 10 | 10 | 3/7 (43) | |
| 30 | 8 | 8 | 11/30 (37) | |
| 21 | <7.1 | 6 | 7/20 (35) | |
| 14 | <7.1 | 4 | 7/40 (18) | |
| 7 | <7.1 | 2 | 6/40 (15) | |
| 4 | <7.1 | 1 | 6/20 (30) | |
| naive | <7.1 | n.a. | 6/40 (15) | |
| 159 | 104 | n.a. | 9/10 (90) | |
| 140 | 48 | n.a. | 9/10 (90) | |
| 113 | 31 | n.a. | 5/5 (100) | |
| 91 | 22 | n.a. | 9/10 (90) |
Shown are reciprocal MN titers:
expected titer based on the volume and titer of injected immune sera;
measured circulating titer 2 h prior to challenge;
extrapolated from titers measured 2 h prior to challengea.
Mice were challenged intranasally with 104 TCID50 wild-type H5N1 virus. Animals surviving for ≥14 days are considered protected.
Immune serum administered on 3 successive days. n.a., not applicable.
Figure 2Correlation of survival of passively immunized mice with neutralizing antibody titer following challenge with wild-type H5N1 virus.
Data points represent the mean % of surviving animals 14 days following lethal challenge of CD1 mice which had received immune sera from (A) CD1 mice, (B) guinea pigs or (C) humans. Reciprocal neutralizing antibody titers shown are extrapolated from titers measured 2 h prior to challenge. All individual mice receiving mouse immune sera of titer ≥1∶18 or guinea pig immune sera of titer ≥1∶37 were protected from disease; these animals are omitted from the figure to allow better resolution of lower titers.