| Literature DB >> 25557605 |
Daniel Shouval1, Hedwig Roggendorf, Michael Roggendorf.
Abstract
Efficacy and safety of recombinant yeast-derived hepatitis B vaccines for prevention of hepatitis B have been demonstrated unequivocally worldwide as reflected in reduction in HBsAg carrier rates and hepatocellular carcinoma. A new generation of recombinant HBV vaccines expressed in mammalian cells containing Pre-S/S epitopes has been developed in several countries. Such vaccines are useful in special risk groups, i.e., in non-responders to conventional HBV vaccines including older adults, obese people, health care workers, patients with renal failure and on dialysis, transplant patients, patients with HIV as well as travelers on short notice to HBV endemic regions. The future of such vaccines depends on their enhanced immunogenicity and cost profile. Sci-B-Vac™ is a mammalian cell-derived recombinant Pre-S1/Pre-S2/S hepatitis B vaccine which has been shown to be highly immunogenic, inducing faster and higher seroprotection rates against HBV with higher anti-HBs levels at lower HBsAg doses as compared to conventional yeast-derived vaccines. Recently, it has been suggested that such Pre-S/S vaccines against HBV might be efficacious not only for prevention but also for intervention in persistent HBV infection. Data obtained in a recent clinical trial conducted in Vietnam in patients with chronic hepatitis B suggest that repeated monthly i.m. injections of the Sci-B-Vac™ co-administered with daily oral lamivudine treatment can suppress HBV replication and lead to anti-HBs seroconversion in ~50 % of treated patients. Optimization of protocols and efficacy of such an intervention, intended to bypass T cell exhaustion and immune tolerance to HBV remains to be explored.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25557605 PMCID: PMC4305084 DOI: 10.1007/s00430-014-0374-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Microbiol Immunol ISSN: 0300-8584 Impact factor: 3.402
Examples for three generations of hepatitis B vaccines
| Vaccine type | Manufacturer | Envelope antigen | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plasma derived | Hepatavax-B® (Merck & Co.) | SHBs | HBsAg, 5–40 μg/dose, licensed worldwide (not in use) |
| Hevac B® (Pasteur M., France) | SHBsAg, (± MHBs) | HBsAg, 5–20 μg/dose, licensed in France (not in use) | |
| KGC® (Korea Green Cross) | SHBsa | HBsAg, licensed in East Asia | |
| Recombinant, yeast derived | RECOMBIVAX® HB (Merck & Co., USA) | SHBsa | HBsAg, small S, 2.5–10 μg/dose, licensed worldwide |
| Engerix-B® (GSK, Belgium) | SHBsa | HBsAg, small S, 10–20 μg/dose, licensed worldwide | |
| TGP 943™ (Takeda Chem, Japan) | SHBsa, MHBs | HBsAg (small S, Pre-S2) 10 μg/dose, licensed in Japan | |
| Recombinant, mammalian cell derived | Gen Hevac B® (Pasteur M, France)b | SHBs, MHBs | HBsAg (S, Pre-S2), 20 μg/dose, licensed in France |
| Sci-B-Vac/Bio-Hep-B™/Hepimmune™ (SciVac, Israel)c | SHBs, MHBs, LHBs | HBsAg, small S, Pre-S1, Pre-S2, 2.5–10 μg/dose, licensed in Israel and several countries in East Asia | |
| AG-3™ (Hepagene™) (Medeva, UK)c | SHBs, MHBs, LHBs | HBsAg, small S, Pre-S1, Pre-S2, 10–20 μg/dose, (not manufactured anymore) |
aSHBs-p24
bContain non-glycosylated p24 and glycosylated gp27, gp33, gp36
cContain non-glycosylated p24 and p39, and glycosylated gp27, gp33, gp36, gp42
Fig. 1Rapid seroprotection against hepatitis B following the first dose of a Pre-S1/Pre-S2/S vaccine. Comparison of seroprotection (%), after one and two doses of 10 μg/1.0 ml of Sci-B-Vac (n = 10; shaded bars) and 20 μg/ml Engerix-B® (n = 8; white bars). Arrows reflect time of immunization. Reproduced by permission from Ref. [37]
Fig. 2Anti-HBs response expressed as geometric mean titers (GMT), following immunization of vaccine and HBV naïve individuals with a Pre-S1/Pre-S2/S hepatitis B vaccine. Vaccinees (n = 105), 18–29 years old, M/F ratio 1:3, received three i.m. injections of Sci-B-Vac™ (V) at 5 or 10 μg/dose at 0,1 and 6 months. Seroprotection rates at 2, 6, 7 and 12 months post-priming were in the range of 79–83, 97–98, 100 and 100 %, respectively, for both groups. Quantitative anti-HBs response is expressed in mIU/ml. Modified, based on Ref. [35]
Fig. 3Distribution of anti-HBs titers in anti-HBc (-), HBsAg (-) neonates, immunized at birth and at 1 and 6 months, who received either 2.5 μg/0.5 ml, (N = 495; dark blue bars) or 5 μg/0.5 ml, (N = 200; light blue bars) Sci-B-Vac™/dose, data recorded at month 9 post-priming. (Data extracted from registration file, study HBN014-01)
Fig. 4Effect of body weight on immunogenicity. Comparison of GMT (anti-HBs titers) in adults who received three doses of either Sci-B-Vac™ (Bio-Hep-B™) or Engerix-B® at 0, 1 and 6 months (studies 38-92-001 and 38-96-040), measured at month 7). Reproduced from the registration file of Sci-B-Vac™ in Israel
Fig. 5Adoptive transfer of immunity to HBV in mice: anti-HBs response in immune-suppressed BALB/c mice (N = 10), treated by whole body irradiation and bone marrow transplantation from immune-competent donor mice immunized i.p. with 1 μg of HBsAg (D. Shouval, unpublished data)
Fig. 6HBV-DNA reductions at 3 months post-treatment. The percentage of patients with early HBV-DNA reduction (after 3 months) was expressed using two cutoff levels (reductions of >1 log copy/ml and >2 log copies/ml). The asterisk indicates a significant difference between the VAC + LAM and LAM groups (P < 0.05). VAC-recipients of Sci-B-Vac™, V + L-recipients of Sci-B-Vac™ and Lamivudine, LAM recipients of lamivudine. Reproduced by permission Ref. [81]
Rates of vaccine-induced anti-HBs seropositivity for the three groups after eight i.m. injections of 20 μg/dose Sci-B-Vac™ as tested at month 18, 10, months after administration of the last treatment. VAC-recipients of Sci-B-Vac™, V + L-recipients of Sci-B-Vac™ and Lamivudine, LAM recipients of lamivudine. Reproduced by permission from Ref. [81]
| Mo | No. (%) of anti-HBs responders in the following treatment group |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VAC | V + L | LAM | ||
| 3 | 2 (3.3) | 3 (5.0) | 0 | NS |
| 9 | 13 (21.7) | 21 (35.0) | 0 | <0.001 |
| 12 | 17 (28.3)b | 27 (45.0)b | 0 | <0.001 |
| 15 | 17 (28.3)b | 28 (46.7)b | 0 | <0.001 |
| 18 | 19 (31.7)b | 31 (51.7)b | 0 | <0.001 |
aFor the overall treatment effect
bThe difference between the VAC and V + L groups was significant (P < 0.05)