| Literature DB >> 26978406 |
Sina Ogholikhan1, Kathleen B Schwarz2.
Abstract
Viral hepatitis is a serious health problem all over the world. However, the reduction of the morbidity and mortality due to vaccinations against hepatitis A and hepatitis B has been a major component in the overall reduction in vaccine preventable diseases. We will discuss the epidemiology, vaccine development, and post-vaccination effects of the hepatitis A and B virus. In addition, we discuss attempts to provide hepatitis D vaccine for the 350 million individuals infected with hepatitis B globally. Given the lack of a hepatitis C vaccine, the many challenges facing the production of a hepatitis C vaccine will be shown, along with current and former vaccination trials. As there is no current FDA-approved hepatitis E vaccine, we will present vaccination data that is available in the rest of the world. Finally, we will discuss the existing challenges and questions facing future endeavors for each of the hepatitis viruses, with efforts continuing to focus on dramatically reducing the morbidity and mortality associated with these serious infections of the liver.Entities:
Keywords: hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E; vaccines
Year: 2016 PMID: 26978406 PMCID: PMC4810058 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines4010006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Figure 1Global prevalence of the hepatitis A virus. Used by permission of the publisher.
Recommendations for adult vaccination [5].
| Individuals traveling to or working in countries with high or intermediate rates of hepatitis A |
| Individuals with chronic liver disease |
| Individuals with clotting factor disorders |
| Men who have sex with men |
| Illicit drug users (injection and non-injection) |
| Individuals with close personal contact with an international adoptee from a country of high or intermediate endemicity during the first 60 days following arrival in the United States |
| Individuals working with HAV-infected primates or with HAV in a research laboratory |
| Individuals with recent exposure for post-exposure prophylaxis |
Recommendations for adult vaccination with hepatitis B vaccine.
| Sex partners of HBsAg-positive people |
| People with more than one sex partner in the past six months |
| People seeking evaluation or treatment for a sexually transmitted infection |
| Men who have sex with men |
| Current or recent injection drug users |
| Household contacts of HBsAg-positive people |
| Residents and staff of facilities for people with developmental disabilities |
| Health-care workers with risk of exposure to blood-contaminated body fluids |
| People with end-stage renal disease |
| People with diabetes mellitus 19 through 59 years of age |
| International travelers to regions with increased HBV prevalence |
| People with chronic liver disease |
| People with human immunodeficiency (HIV) infection |
Modified from The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [24].
Figure 2Global prevalence of HBV [24]. Figure is used with permission from the publisher.
Figure 3Reported acute hepatitis B incidence, United States, 1980-2013 [1]. Figure is used with permission from the publisher.
Figure 4Global prevalence of hepatitis C virus [65]. This image was used with permission of the publisher.
Clinical trials in HCV vaccine. All data below obtained from www.clinicaltrials.gov.
| Study Type | Vaccine biology | Study Number | Individual type | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preventative | AdCh3NSmut1 MVA-NSmut | NCT01436357 | Healthy at risk population | Pending/Jan 2016 |
| Preventative | AdCh3NSmut1 MVA-NSmut | NCT02362217 | Healthy subjects/HIV + | Pending/Oct 2016 |
| Therapeutic/peptide antigens | PEV2A PEV2B | NCT00445419 | Hep C+ | Updated 2/2010 – no results |
| Therapeutic | MRKAd5 HIV-1 gag vaccine | NCT00857311 | Hep C+ | Canceled - non-efficacious results of previous study using similar agent |
| Therapeutic | Recombinant IMPs Ad6NSmut and MVA-NSmu | NCT01701336 | Chronic Hep C+ | Last updated 2013, no results |
| Therapeutic | TG4040 | NCT00449124 | Chronic Hep C+ | Withdrawn |
| Therapeutic | GI-5005 | NCT00124215 | Chronic Hep C+ | Completed 2010 – no results |
| Therapeutic | IC41 | NCT00601770 | Chronic Hep C+ | Phase 2 – no results 2014 |
| Therapeutic – Genotype 1a | Autologous dendritic cells transduced with Ad encoding NS3 | NCT02309086 | Chronic Hep C+ | Study complete 2015 – no results reported |
Figure 5Global prevalence of HEV [70]
Figure 6Hepatitis E viral genome [76]. This image was used with permission from the publisher.
Clinical trials of HEV vaccine [69]. This figure was used with permission from the publisher.
| Shrestha | Zhu | |
|---|---|---|
| Phase study | Phase II trial | Phase III trial |
| Type of study | Randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled | Randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled |
| Company | GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals | Xiamen Innovax Biotech |
| Country | Nepal | Jiangsu province, China |
| Recombinant protein ORF2 | Baculovirus expressed 56 kDa | E. coli expressed HEV 239 |
| Number of vaccines | 1794 healthy subjects | 112 604 healthy subjects |
| Randomization | HEV vaccine | HEV |
| Population | Mostly males (99.6%) Young (mean age 25 years) | Males and females, 16–65 years |
| HEV genotypes | Genotype 1 prevalent | Genotypes 1 and 4 prevalent with predominance |
| Doses | 20 µg | 30 µg |
| Route of administration | Intramuscularly | Intramuscularly |
| Intervals between doses | 0, 1, 6 months | 0, 1, 6 months |
| Primary end-point | Prevention of clinically overt HEV disease | Prevention of clinically overt HEV disease |
| Follow-up period | 2 years post-vaccination | 13 month post-vaccination |
| Efficacy | ||
| After 1st dose | 87.5% | 95.5% |
| After 2nd dose | 85.7% | 100% |
| After 3rd dose | 95.5% | 100% |
| Side effects Commercialization | Increased injection-site pain Not further developed | No side effects Hecolin® (Innovax) |