| Literature DB >> 25774157 |
Mizuho Fukushige1, Kate M Mitchell2, Claire D Bourke2, Mark E J Woolhouse1, Francisca Mutapi2.
Abstract
Schistosomiasis is a water-borne, parasitic disease of major public health importance. There has been considerable effort for several decades toward the development of a vaccine against the disease. Numerous mouse experimental studies using attenuated Schistosoma mansoni parasites for vaccination have been published since 1960s. However, to date, there has been no systematic review or meta-analysis of these data. The aim of this study is to identify measurable experimental conditions that affect the level of protection against re-infection with S. mansoni in mice vaccinated with radiation attenuated cercariae. Following a systematic review, a total of 755 observations were extracted from 105 articles (published 1963-2007) meeting the searching criteria. Random effects meta-regression models were used to identify the influential predictors. Three predictors were found to have statistically significant effects on the level of protection from vaccination: increasing numbers of immunizing parasites had a positive effect on fraction of protection whereas increasing radiation dose and time to challenge infection had negative effects. Models showed that the irradiated cercariae vaccine has the potential to achieve protection as high as 78% with a single dose vaccination. This declines slowly over time but remains high for at least 8 months after the last immunization. These findings provide insights into the optimal delivery of attenuated parasite vaccination and into the nature and development of protective vaccine induced immunity against schistosomiasis, which may inform the formulation of human vaccines and the predicted duration of protection and thus frequency of booster vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: animal model; attenuated cercariae; protective immunity; random effects meta-regression; schistosomiasis; systematic review
Year: 2015 PMID: 25774157 PMCID: PMC4343029 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Possible predictors investigated and their units/codes.
| Variable name | Units/code |
|---|---|
| Number of immunizing parasites (total and number per dose) | Number of parasites log10 transformed |
| Number of challenge parasites | Number of parasites log10 transformed |
| Number of immunizations | Count |
| Irradiation dose | Krad |
| Host age | Weeks |
| Host sex | Male, female, mixed |
| Time between the last immunization and challenge | Days |
| Time between challenge and perfusion | Days |
Results from random effects meta-regression models.
| Predictors | Coefficient | SE | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of immunizing parasites per dose (log10 transformed) | 0.4338 | 0.0661 | <0.001 |
| Irradiation dose | −0.0047 | 0.0008 | 0.04 |
| Time between the last immunization and challenge | −0.0015 | 0.0007 | <0.001 |
Positive coefficients indicate the predictor’s positive dose effect on fraction of protection whereas negative coefficients indicate predictor’s negative influence on fraction of protection.
Figure 1Fitted graphs for identified predictors from a random effects meta-regression model. Identified predictors effects on fraction of protection in mouse model: (A) the number of immunizing cercariae over the range 50–5,000 cercariae, (B) the irradiation dose over the range 3–160 krad, (C) the time between the last immunization and challenge over the range 7–230 days. Data points indicate reported fraction of protection for each observation. Negative fractions indicate that vaccination was associated with increase of schistosome worm burden. Lines are fitted graphs generated from random effects meta-regression model (see text). Dashed lines in the graphs show the highest level of protection over range that could be achieved.