| Literature DB >> 33288923 |
Raffael Nachbagauer1,2, Jodi Feser3, Abdollah Naficy3, David I Bernstein4,5, Jeffrey Guptill6, Emmanuel B Walter6,7, Franceso Berlanda-Scorza3,8, Daniel Stadlbauer1, Patrick C Wilson9,10, Teresa Aydillo1,11, Mohammad Amin Behzadi1, Disha Bhavsar1, Carly Bliss1, Christina Capuano1, Juan Manuel Carreño1, Veronika Chromikova1, Carine Claeys12,13, Lynda Coughlan1, Alec W Freyn1,14, Christopher Gast3, Andres Javier1, Kaijun Jiang1, Chiara Mariottini1, Meagan McMahon1, Monica McNeal4,5, Alicia Solórzano1,15, Shirin Strohmeier1,16, Weina Sun1, Marie Van der Wielen12, Bruce L Innis3, Adolfo García-Sastre1,11,17,18, Peter Palese1,17,18, Florian Krammer19.
Abstract
Seasonal influenza viruses constantly change through antigenic drift and the emergence of pandemic influenza viruses through antigenic shift is unpredictable. Conventional influenza virus vaccines induce strain-specific neutralizing antibodies against the variable immunodominant globular head domain of the viral hemagglutinin protein. This necessitates frequent re-formulation of vaccines and handicaps pandemic preparedness. In this completed, observer-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled phase I trial (NCT03300050), safety and immunogenicity of chimeric hemagglutinin-based vaccines were tested in healthy, 18-39-year-old US adults. The study aimed to test the safety and ability of the vaccines to elicit broadly cross-reactive antibodies against the hemagglutinin stalk domain. Participants were enrolled into five groups to receive vaccinations with live-attenuated followed by AS03-adjuvanted inactivated vaccine (n = 20), live-attenuated followed by inactivated vaccine (n = 15), twice AS03-adjuvanted inactivated vaccine (n = 16) or placebo (n = 5, intranasal followed by intramuscular; n = 10, twice intramuscular) 3 months apart. Vaccination was found to be safe and induced a broad, strong, durable and functional immune response targeting the conserved, immunosubdominant stalk of the hemagglutinin. The results suggest that chimeric hemagglutinins have the potential to be developed as universal vaccines that protect broadly against influenza viruses.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33288923 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-020-1118-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440