| Literature DB >> 32399498 |
Ben Morton1,2,3,4, Sarah Burr1,2, Kondwani Jambo1,2, Jamie Rylance1,2,4, Marc Y R Henrion1,2, Ndaziona Peter Banda4,5, Edna Nsomba1,4, Blessings Kapumba1, Lucinda Manda-Taylor1,5, Clemens Masesa1,2, Daniela Ferrreira2, Stephen B Gordon1,2,4.
Abstract
Streptococcus pneumoniae is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality due to community acquired pneumonia, bacterial meningitis and bacteraemia worldwide. Pneumococcal conjugate vaccines protect against invasive disease, but are expensive to manufacture, limited in serotype coverage, associated with serotype replacement and demonstrate reduced effectiveness against mucosal colonisation. As asymptomatic colonisation of the human nasopharynx is a prerequisite for pneumococcal disease, this is proposed as a marker for novel vaccine efficacy. Our team established a safe and reproducible pneumococcal controlled human infection model at Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine (LSTM). This has been used to test vaccine induced protection against nasopharyngeal carriage for ten years in over 1000 participants. We will transfer established standardised operating procedures from LSTM to Malawi and test in up to 36 healthy participants. Primary endpoint: detection of the inoculated pneumococci by classical culture from nasal wash recovered from the participants after pneumococcal challenge. Secondary endpoints: confirmation of robust clinical and laboratory methods for sample capture and processing. Tertiary endpoints: participant acceptability of study and methods. We will test three doses of pneumococcal inoculation (20,000, 80,000 and 160,000 colony forming units [CFUs] per naris) using a parsimonious study design intended to reduce unnecessary exposure to participants. We hypothesise that 80,000 CFUs will induce nasal colonisation in approximately half of participants per established LSTM practice. The aims of the feasibility study are: 1) Establish Streptococcus pneumoniae experimental human pneumococcal carriage in Malawi; 2) Confirm optimal nasopharyngeal pneumococcal challenge dose; 3) Confirm safety and measure potential symptoms; 4) Confirm sampling protocols and laboratory assays; 5) Assess feasibility and acceptability of consent and study procedures. Confirmation of pneumococcal controlled human infection model feasibility in Malawi will enable us to target pneumococcal vaccine candidates for an at-risk population who stand the most to gain from new and improved vaccine strategies. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Experimental medicine; Pneumococcal carriage; Streptococcus pneumoniae; controlled human infection model; global health; nasal colonisation; pneumonia; vaccine
Year: 2020 PMID: 32399498 PMCID: PMC7194502 DOI: 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.15689.2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Wellcome Open Res ISSN: 2398-502X
Pneumococcal Carriage in Vulnerable Populations in Africa (PCVPA) consortium data from 2018 on pneumococcal carriage and pneumococcal conjugate vaccine 13 status [8].
The data show that despite vaccination, children aged 3–6 years have the same vaccine type carriage rates as unvaccinated 5–10-year olds.
| Malawian PCVPA surveillance data | Children 3–6 years
| Children 5–10 years
| HIV infected adults
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Vaccine type
| 20.1%
| 20.1%
| 13.9%
|
| Non-vaccine type
| 55.9%
| 36.8%
| 29.5%
|
Figure 2. Dose escalation study design, adapted from Waddington et al. [12].
The doses for Groups 1, 2 and 3 will be 20000, 80000 and 160000 pneumococcal colony forming units (CFU) per naris respectively. All participants will be monitored for adverse effects and for pneumococcal carriage. The first cohort will be inoculated with 20,000 CFU/naris ( Inoculation A). †: Eight participants will be randomised 3:1 to pneumococcal inoculation (n=6) or sham inoculation with 0.9% saline (n=2). If ≥2/6 participants from the initial cohort of eight develop experimental pneumococcal carriage, a further 4 participants will be recruited to this dose cohort. *: Four participants will be randomised 3:1 to pneumococcal inoculation (n=3) or sham inoculation with 0.9% saline (n=1). If the combined carriage rate of the completed cohorts is ≥4/9 (6+3 nasally challenged with pneumococcus), then the nasal challenge dose will be established, and we will conclude the study. If at either of these decision points, the carriage rate is insufficient, the algorithm will be restarted with a higher challenge dose of 80,000 CFU/naris ( Inoculation B) and the recruitment schedule repeated. If at 80,000 CFU, the carriage rate is insufficient, then an additional cohort of participants will be recruited to the 160,000CFU/naris dose escalation group ( Inoculation C). ‡: 12 participants will be randomised 3:1 to pneumococcal inoculation (n=9) or sham inoculation with 0.9% saline (n=3). We have previously demonstrated 50-60% carriage rates with the 80,000 CFU 6B dose in the Liverpool pneumococcal controlled human infection model [6, 13].
Figure 1. Participant flow chart. D-5 refers to 5 days before day 0, the day of inoculation, and d1 is one day after and so on.
*The decision for antibiotics will be communicated directly at visit 7 except in the unlikely circumstance that only d14 is positive for carriage, in which case the result will be telephoned in time for visit 8.
Research Participant Remuneration.
*Accommodation and board costs will be paid directly by the research team to the Grace Bandawe Centre. Visits 3, 5 and 8 mild discomfort. Visits 1, 2, 4, 6 and 7 mild/moderate discomfort. Exchange rate is approximately 800 Malawian Kwacha to one US dollar.
| MARVELS Research Participant Remuneration (based on Malawian
| |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Reimburse expenses | Rate in MK | Number of events | Total |
| a) Transport | 900 | 8 | 7200 |
| b) Subsistence (one meal) | 1500 | 8 | 12000 |
| c) Accommodation (one night)
| 15000 | 0 | 0 |
| Compensation | |||
| Total time travelling (hrs) | 8 | ||
| Total time in research facility (hrs) | 24 research
| ||
| Time in days (day = 8 hours) | 1000 | 12 | 12000 |
| Procedure A (mild discomfort) | 2000 | 3 | 6000 |
| Procedure B (moderate discomfort) | 6000 | 5 | 30000 |
| Procedure C (long or complex) | 10000 | 0 | |
| TOTAL for study | 67,200 | ||
| AVERAGE per visit | 8,400 | ||