| Literature DB >> 31101422 |
Joshua Osowicki1, Kristy I Azzopardi2, Ciara Baker2, Claire S Waddington3, Manisha Pandey4, Tibor Schuster5, Anneke Grobler6, Allen C Cheng7, Andrew J Pollard8, James S McCarthy9, Michael F Good4, Mark J Walker10, James B Dale11, Michael R Batzloff4, Jonathan R Carapetis12, Pierre R Smeesters13, Andrew C Steer14.
Abstract
Group A Streptococcus (GAS) is a highly-adapted and human-restricted pathogen responsible for a high global burden of disease across a diverse clinical spectrum. Vaccine development has been impeded by scientific, regulatory, and commercial obstacles. Human infection studies (HIS) are increasingly contributing to drug, diagnostics, and vaccine development, reducing uncertainty at early stages, especially for pathogens with animal models that incompletely reproduce key elements of human disease. We review the small number of historical GAS HIS and present the study protocol for a dose-ranging inpatient study in healthy adults. The primary objective of the study is to establish a new GAS pharyngitis HIS with an attack rate of at least 60% as a safe and reliable platform for vaccine evaluation and pathogenesis research. According to an adaptive dose-ranging study design, emm75 GAS doses manufactured in keeping with principles of Good Manufacturing Practice will be directly applied by swab to the pharynx of carefully screened healthy adult volunteers at low risk of severe complicated GAS disease. Participants will remain as closely monitored inpatients for up to six days, observed for development of the primary outcome of acute symptomatic pharyngitis, as defined by clinical and microbiological criteria. All participants will be treated with antibiotics and followed as outpatients for six months. An intensive sampling schedule will facilitate extensive studies of host and organism dynamics during experimental pharyngitis. Ethics approval has been obtained and the study has been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03361163).Entities:
Keywords: Controlled human infection; Group A Streptococcus; Human challenge; Human infection studies; Streptococcus pyogenes; Vaccine development
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31101422 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.03.059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641