| Literature DB >> 24834067 |
Abstract
It is estimated that over 2.5 billion people are at risk for contracting dengue, a virus responsible for 50-390 million infections in addition to thousands of hospitalizations and deaths each year. There are no licensed vaccines available to combat this pathogen but substantial efforts are underway to develop live-attenuated, inactivated, and subunit vaccines that will protect against each of the four serotypes of dengue. Unfortunately, the results of a recent Phase IIb efficacy trial involving a tetravalent live-attenuated chimeric dengue virus vaccine have raised questions with regard to our current understanding of vaccine-mediated immunity to this important flavivirus. Here, we will briefly summarize these vaccination efforts and discuss the importance of informative in vivo models for determining vaccine efficacy and the need to establish a quantitative correlate of immunity in order to predict the duration of vaccine-induced antiviral protection.Entities:
Keywords: CD4+ T cells; CD8+ T cells; antibody; correlates of immunity; dengue; immunological memory; vaccines
Year: 2014 PMID: 24834067 PMCID: PMC4018518 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2014.00195
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Analysis of viremia in human subjects with or without pre-existing antiviral T cell memory.
| YFV-17D-Naïve | YFV-17D-Immune | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Challenge virus | YFV-17D 105 PFU | YFV-DENV2 105 PFU | YFV-JEV 105 PFU | YFV-JEV 104 PFU | YFV-17D 105 PFU | YFV-DENV2 105 PFU | YFV-JEV 105 PFU | YFV-JEV 104 PFU |
| 5 | 14 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 14 | 6 | 6 | |
| Viremia (%) | 100 | 57.1 | 83.3 | 83.3 | 0 | 78.6 | 83.3 | 100 |
| AUC | 56 | 20.7 | 21.7 | 48.3 | 0 | 50.4 | 58.3 | 50 |
*Two clinical studies were conducted to determine if pre-existing YFV-specific immunity would impact virus replication upon challenge with YFV-17D or chimeric versions of YFV-17D in which the envelope and PrM proteins of YFV-17D were replaced by the envelope and PrM proteins of either DENV2 (.
Figure 1Dynamics and duration of vaccine-induced immunity. The development of pathogen-specific immunity after vaccination can follow a number of different kinetic models. (A) Development of a measurable immune response can be determined, but if it does not reach above the protective threshold (indicated by the dashed line), then measurable immunity will note equate to protective immunity. Short-lived protective immunity (B) is common following primary immunization and is one of the reasons why most vaccines require booster vaccination. Long-lived protective immunity may be achieved by durable or nearly steady-state levels of immunity (C) or through the development of strong but rapidly declining immunity (D), if the starting point begins high in reference to the protective threshold. It is important to note that the protective threshold will differ by pathogen or disease and an immunological correlate of protection must be known in order to extrapolate the potential durability of a particular vaccine-mediated immune response.