| Literature DB >> 34550392 |
Ann-Mari Svennerholm1, Anna Lundgren1, Susannah Leach1,2, Marjahan Akhtar3, Firdausi Qadri3.
Abstract
Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) is a leading cause of mortality and morbidity in children in low-income countries. We have tested an oral ETEC vaccine, ETVAX, consisting of inactivated E coli overexpressing the most prevalent colonization factors and a toxoid, LCTBA, administered together with a mucosal adjuvant, double-mutant heat-labile toxin (dmLT), for capacity to induce mucosal immune responses and immunological memory against the primary vaccine antigens, ie, colonization factors, heat-labile toxin B-subunit and O antigen. The studies show that ETVAX could induce strong intestine-derived and/or fecal immune responses in a majority of vaccinated Swedish adults and in different age groups, including infants, in Bangladesh.Entities:
Keywords: ETEC; mucosal immune responses; vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34550392 PMCID: PMC8687049 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiab475
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226
Clinical Trials of Second-Generation Oral-Inactivated ETEC Vaccines
| Trial | Vaccine | Volunteers | Publication |
|---|---|---|---|
| OEV-120, Phase 1, Sweden | Prototype vaccine (recombinant CFA/I strain + LCTB | 59 Swedish adults: 2 doses | Ref. [ |
| OEV-121, Phase 1, Sweden | 4 recombinant strains expressing CFA/I, CS3, CS5, CS6 (multivalent vaccine: 1011 bacteria + 1 mg LCTB | 129 Swedish adults: 2 doses | Ref. [ |
| OEV-121A, Phase 1, Sweden | Booster with multivalent ETEC vaccine | 60 Swedish naive and previously immunized adults: 1 dose | Ref. [ |
| OEV-122, Phase I/II, Bangladesh | Adults: ETVAX (multivalent ETEC vaccine ±10 µg dmLT) | 45 Bangladeshi adults: 2 doses | Ref. [ |
| OEV-123, Phase 2b, Benin | ETVAX (multivalent vaccine including 10 µg of dmLT) | 729 Finnish adult travelers: 2 doses | Kantele et al [ |
| OEV-124, Phase 1, Zambia | Adults: ETVAX (multivalent vaccine including 10 µg of dmLT), full dose | 40 Zambian adults: | Sukwa |
Abbreviations: CTB, cholera toxin B subunit; dmLT, double-mutant heat-labile toxin; ETEC, enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli.
aThe different studies were conducted during the period 2010–2021.
Figure 1.Antibody in lymphocyte secretion (ALS) IgA immune responses against ETVAX colonization factors (CFs) and LTB in (A) Swedish adults given 2 biweekly doses of ETVAX alone or ETVAX + 10 or 25 µg of double-mutant heat-labile toxin (dmLT) or placebo; (B) Bangladeshi adults given 2 biweekly doses of ETVAX alone or ETVAX + 10 µg of dmLT or placebo; and (C) Swedish adults given a single dose of ETVAX, including subjects who 1–2 years earlier had been given 2 doses of ETVAX alone or ETVAX + 10 µg of dmLT, and naive age-matched Swedish adults who previously had not been immunized with ETVAX. (A–C) Immune responses were determined as ≥2-fold rises in ALS antibody levels between pre- and postimmunization specimens collected on day 7 after the first day and 5–7 days (day 19–21) after the second dose or on days 4 or 5 and 7 after the single booster dose. Fold-rise responses are shown as geometric mean (bars) responses against the respective vaccine antigen for each study group; dots indicate individual responses; fold-rises in Figure 1A were determined as the maximal response after the first or second dose. Responder frequencies (RF) in vaccine and placebo recipients are indicated below the bars. Based on results from [6, 8, 9].
Figure 2.(A) Mucosal immune responses in Bangladeshi children and infants given 2 biweekly doses of ETVAX ± double-mutant heat-labile toxin (dmLT) against colonization factors (CFs) and LTB: (B cohorts) antibody in lymphocyte secretion (ALS) IgA response in children 24–59 months and (C cohorts) 12–23 months; (D cohorts) fecal secretory IgA (SIgA)/total SIgA response in infants 6–11 months and (table) responder frequencies (RFs) in ALS IgA and/or fecal SIgA/total SIgA in the infants. Immune responses were determined as ≥2-fold rises in ALS titers or SIgA/total SIgA levels between pre- and postimmunization specimens collected on day 7 after the first day and 5 days (day 19) after the second dose. Fold-rise responses, determined as the maximal response after the first or second dose, are shown as geometric mean responses (bars) against the respective vaccine antigen for each study group; dots indicate individual responses. The RFs in vaccine (V) and placebo recipients (P) are indicated below the bars and in the table. Based on results from [7]. (B) Cross-reactive IgA immune response against CFA/I and CS5-related CFs in ALS specimens collected from Bangladeshi adults and children 24–59 months and SIgA/total SIgA responses in fecal specimens from 6- to 11-month-old infants. Paired pre- and postimmunization specimens from subjects previously shown to have responded to CFA/I [7, 8] were tested for immune responses against corresponding concentrations of CS1, CS14, and for infants (fecal specimens) also against CS17 and specimens from subjects who had previously responded to CS5 [7, 8] were similarly tested for responses against CS7. Fold-rise responses are shown as geometric means (bars). The RFs are indicated below the bars.