| Literature DB >> 24476952 |
Abstract
Effective vaccines are available for many protozoal diseases of animals, including vaccines for zoonotic pathogens and for several species of vector-transmitted apicomplexan haemoparasites. In comparison with human diseases, vaccine development for animals has practical advantages such as the ability to perform experiments in the natural host, the option to manufacture some vaccines in vivo, and lower safety requirements. Although it is proper for human vaccines to be held to higher standards, the enduring lack of vaccines for human protozoal diseases is difficult to reconcile with the comparatively immense amount of research funding. Common tactical problems of human protozoal vaccine research include reliance upon adapted rather than natural animal disease models, and an overwhelming emphasis on novel approaches that are usually attempted in replacement of rather than for improvement upon the types of designs used in effective veterinary vaccines. Currently, all effective protozoal vaccines for animals are predicated upon the ability to grow protozoal organisms. Because human protozoal vaccines need to be as effective as animal vaccines, researchers should benefit from a comparison of existing veterinary products and leading experimental vaccine designs. With this in mind, protozoal vaccines are here reviewed.Entities:
Keywords: Protozoal diseases; animal models of human disease; apicomplexa; attenuation; efficacy; malaria; one medicine; review; vaccination
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24476952 PMCID: PMC3961066 DOI: 10.1017/S0031182013002060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasitology ISSN: 0031-1820 Impact factor: 3.234
Experimental animal and human immunizations using whole protozoal organisms
| Target | Animal | Pathogen | Immunization procedure | Adverse events | Challenge protocol | Results | Selected citations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avian malaria | Canary | Sporozoites dissected from mosquitoes, held in physiological solution 12–48 h, and inoculated 1 × SC | In 24 birds, 1 had severe and 2 had weak parasitaemias when sporozoites held <24 h; 21 had no parasitaemia when held between 12–48 h | Birds exposed to infected mosquitoes at least 2 weeks after immunization | All 44 control birds developed malaria. Of 24 immunized birds: 1 had severe, 7 had mild and 16 had no parasitaemia | (Sergent and Sergent, | |
| Falciparum malaria | Human | Volunteers were bitten by 12–15 infected mosquitoes, 3 × , while on chloroquine | Malaria did not occur during this period | Bite of 5 mosquitoes, 2 m after 3rd exposure and 1 m after chloroquine | Malaria occurred in 5 of 5 control subjects but in 0 of 10 immunized subjects | (Roestenberg | |
| Avian malaria | Chicken | Sporozoites dissected from mosquitoes and formalinized (a best protocol). 5 × 104 IV, 3× | No illness reported. | Severe challenge with 500 sporozoites IV, 2 weeks after 3rd vaccination. Death as endpoint | All 20 control birds died but all 20 immunized birds survived with mild to minimal parasitaemia | (Richards, | |
| Falciparum malaria | Human | Sporozoites purified from mosquitoes, irradiated and cryopreserved. 1·35 × 105 IV, 5× (the best protocol). | Injection site tenderness or bruising | Bite of 3 mosquitoes, ∼3 weeks after 5th vaccination | Malaria occurred in 5 of 6 control subjects but in 0 of 6 vaccinates | (Seder | |
| Cat | Bradyzoites PO, 2 × , using sexually incompetent strain | No adverse event reported. No cat shed oocysts in feces following ingestion of T-263 | Ingestion of heterologous bradyzoites in 200 cysts, 47 days after 2nd vaccination | All 6 unvaccinated control cats shed oocysts, but 0 of 24 vaccinated cats shed oocysts | (Freyre | ||
| Toxoplasmosis transmission on farms | Cat | Cat trapping attempted during 7 visits to 8 farms over 3 years. Trapped cats administered live cryopreserved bradyzoites PO up to 2× | Not monitored. | n.a. | Significantly more cats were found shedding | (Mateus-Pinilla | |
| Cutaneous leishmaniasis | Human | Three | ID, 2 × , killed promastigotes, mix of 3 isolates produced | Minor local effects of inoculation and mild fever following 2nd vaccination were reported | n.a. | Within 1 year of vaccination, 2% of vaccinates | (Armijos |
| Cryptosporidiosis diarrhoea | Cattle | 1 × , PO oocysts, killed by lyophilization, at 0–1 day age | None reported | 105 live oocysts PO at 7 days age | In 10 controls and 9 vaccinates, mean duration of diarrhoea was 4 | (Harp and Goff, | |
| Histomoniasis | Turkey | 1 × , PO, live, | No clinical signs nor reduced growth in vaccinated unchallenged birds compared with unvaccinated unchallenged controls | Intra-cloacal administration of 104 low passage virulent trophozoites either at 15 or 29 days age | All 28 controls developed fatal histomoniasis. Only 4 of 14 vaccinated birds challenged at 15 days survived, but all 14 vaccinated birds challenged at 29 days remained clinically healthy and grew as well as uninfected controls | (Liebhart |
All studies in this table used natural hosts and incorporated challenge controls or epidemiological comparisons.
Representative comparisons of molecular malaria vaccine designs and their performance in artificially adapted animal models and human trials
| Vaccine design | Correlation between animal model and human results | Pathogen and host | Molecular details | Production | Inoculation | Results | Selected citations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sporozoite recombinant antigen | Weak | CSP repetitive moiety (CS170) conjugated to BSA. | 5× SC | Mice challenged with sporozoites 2 weeks after vaccination. Best protocol resulted in sterile immunity in 7 of 7 mice | (Reed | ||
| RTS,S fusion protein has half of CSP & entire surface ag of hepB virus | Recombinant ag from transfected yeast | 3 × IM | This recombinant protein was first described in 1988. The best performing vaccine of this type. Latest field trials achieved 1 year efficacy of 44% in children and 30% in infants. Efficacy reduces over time despite frequent natural exposure | (Rutgers | |||
| Erythrocyte stage recombinant antigen | Poor | Pf MSP-1 | Recombinant ag from transfected | 2 × IM | Protected 6 of 6 monkeys against uncontrolled parasitaemia following lethal (for naive monkeys) IV challenge with infected erythrocytes, 7 weeks after vaccination | (Darko | |
| Pf MSP-1 | As above | 3 × IM | Vaccine efficacy < 15% in field trial. Children followed 6 m after last vaccination | (Ogutu | |||
| Liver stage recombinant antigen | Poor | Pf LSA-3 long synthetic peptides | Recombinant ag from transfected | 3 × SC | Protected 3 of 3 monkeys against parasitaemia from IV inoculation of | (Perlaza | |
| Pf LSA-NRC | As above | 2 × IM | All 22 volunteers became parasitaemic after being bitten by 5 infected mosquitoes, 2 weeks after 2nd vaccination | (Cummings | |||
| DNA using plasmids & live virus | Poor | 4 Pk ag & 3 cytokines encoded in plasmids, followed by live virus bearing the same Pk ag | Plasmid vectors & genetically modified live Vaccinia virus | Plasmid mix 4 × IM, then virus mix IM | Infectious challenge 2 weeks after viral boost. All 4 unvaccinated monkeys were treated for overwhelming parasitaemia. Of 11 vaccinated monkeys, sterile immunity occurred in 2 and spontaneous resolution of parasitaemia occurred in 7 | (Rogers | |
| Pf ME-TRAP in plasmid, followed by live virus with same ag. Or identical regimen substituting CS moieties for ME-TRAP | As above | Plasmid 2 × IM, then virus ID | 7 of 8 volunteers develop parasitaemia after being bitten by 5 infected mosquitoes, 2 weeks following last vaccination with ME-TRAP. Parasitaemia was delayed 1 day. CS vaccine regimen had no protective effect | (Dunachie |
To date, no protozoal vaccine based on these or similar molecular designs has achieved widespread success in humans or animals.
Protozoal immunizations with live virulent organisms using controlled-exposure or infection-and-treatment protocols
| Disease target | Pathogen | Content | Inoculation | Immunizing procedure | Producers | Production | Notes | Selected citations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human cutaneous leishmaniasis | Promastigotes | 1 × ID | Infect a cosmetically unimportant skin site (leishmanization) | Government sponsored labs in Central Asia | Recent use in Uzbekistan. Skin lesion may endure months | (Dunning, | ||
| Coccidiosis of chickens and turkeys | Numerous species of | Oocysts | 1 × PO via feed, water, spraying chicks, or in ovo | Controlled dose exposure, in the past often followed by a low level of coccidiostat in feed or water | Numerous bio-pharmaceutical corporations | Widespread use since 1952. Experiments and field trials show improved growth in vaccinated birds | (Long | |
| East Coast fever of cattle | Sporozoites of one or more strains | 1 × SC | Simultaneous application of vaccine and depot oxytetracycline | VetAgro Tanzania Ltd., & government sponsored labs | Homogenates from infected ticks | Protection endures ≥ 3 years | (Radley |
Protozoal vaccines that contain live attenuated organisms
| Disease target | Pathogen | Content | Inoculation | Producers | Production | Availability | Notes | Selected citations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toxoplasmosis abortion in sheep | Tachyzoites of the S48 strain | 1 × SC in pre-breeding ewe lambs | MSD Animal Health, Toxovax | New Zealand and parts of Europe | Enduring protection. Initial attenuation by rapid passage in mice. Can't encyst. In use since 1988 | (Wilkins | ||
| Bovine tropical theileriosis | Macro-schizonts | 1 × SC | Primarily government sponsored labs | e.g. Turkey, China, India, Iran, Israel, Spain | Enduring protection under field conditions. Attenuation achieved several times by adapting to cell culture. Vaccine organisms cannot be transmitted to ticks | (Hashemi-Fesharki, | ||
| Bovine babesiosis | Merozoites | 1 × SC or IM in juvenile calves | Primarily government sponsored labs | e.g. Australia, Argentina, Columbia, Cuba, Israel | An epidemiologic success, but several vaccines can induce disease (2% vaccine reactions in Cuba) and are contraindicated in adults. An | (Callow | ||
| Poultry coccidiosis | Numerous species of | Oocysts | 1 × PO via feed, water, spraying chicks | Numerous bio-pharmaceutical corporations | Used worldwide | ‘Precocious’ strains select short prepatency, produce fewer oocysts with reduced virulence but greater production cost | (Jeffers, |
Protozoal vaccines that contain whole killed organisms
| Disease target | Pathogen | Content | Inoculation | Producers | Production | Notes | Selected citations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bovine trichomoniasis | Killed trophozoites in adjuvant | 2 × SC annually before breeding season | Boehringer – Ingelheim, Trichguard | Axenic culture in broth | Epidemiological meta-analysis and challenge trials support modest to moderate efficacy in females. Short duration of immunity may be sufficient for seasonal breeding. Value in males is unclear | (Cobo | |
| Canine giardiasis | Killed disrupted trophozoites in adjuvant | 2 × SC, then annually | Zoetis, GiardiaVax | Axenic culture in broth | In an experimental challenge within weeks of vaccination, significant reduction of infection and diarrhoea occurred in vaccinates. A trial in an animal shelter did not show a benefit | (Olson | |
| Equine protozoal myelitis | Killed organisms in adjuvant | 2 × IM | Out of production | Did not progress beyond conditional licence. There was no good disease challenge model and no published epidemiological analysis to support efficacy | (Witonsky | ||
| Neosporosis abortion in cattle | Killed tachyzoites in adjuvant | 2 × SC, then annually | Out of production | Low overall efficacy. Goals may have been confounded by confusion between prevention of infection in naive cows | (Weston |
Protozoal vaccines that contain defined antigens or antigen extracts
| Disease target | Pathogen | Content | Inoculation | Manufacturer | Production | Notes | Selected citations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canine visceral leishmaniasis (in Brazil) | Fucose mannose ligand glycoprotein complex, with saponin adjuvant | 3 × SC, then annually | Zoetis, Leishmune | Ag extracted from | Field trials support efficacy in reducing prevalence of infection and disease in dogs. Injection reactions common but not serious. Epidemiological evidence of associated reduction of vector-borne zoonotic transmission in Brazil | (Borja-Cabrera | |
| Canine visceral leishmaniasis (in Europe) | Excreted secreted proteins with saponin adjuvant | 3 × SC, then annually | Virbac, CaniLeish | Ag extracted from | Pre-licensed formulations (with muramyl dipeptide adjuvant) protected dogs from infectious challenge 8 m after vaccination, and in a field trial showed 92% efficacy over 2 years | (Lemesre | |
| Canine visceral leishmaniasis (in Brazil) | A2 amastigote ag linked to a histidine tag, with saponin adjuvant | 3 × SC, then annually | Hertape Calier, Leish-Tec | Recombinant ag produced by transfected | Licensed in Brazil since 2007. Partial protection in 7 dogs demonstrated in severe IV challenge administered 4 weeks after vaccination. No further information regarding lab or field studies | (Fernandes | |
| Coccidiosis of chickens | 2 × IM in breeding hens before laying | Philbro Animal Health Corp., Coxabic | Gametocyte ag induces interspecific protection. Maternal immunity is boosted by natural exposure of hatchlings to coccidia. Each vaccine dose is relatively costly, but passive immunity extends to many eggs/chicks. Efficacy supported by challenge experiments and production data | (Sharman | |||
| Canine babesiosis | Soluble parasite ag in saponin adjuvant | 2 × SC, then twice annually | Out of production | Mild-moderate reduction of disease severity in vigorous IV heterologous challenge. Injection site reactions reported. No published epidemiological investigations | (Schetters |