| Literature DB >> 35608749 |
Jesús M Torres-Flores1, Arturo Reyes-Sandoval2, Ma Isabel Salazar3.
Abstract
Dengue is one of the most prevalent mosquito-borne diseases in the world, affecting an estimated 390 million people each year, according to models. For the last two decades, efforts to develop safe and effective vaccines to prevent dengue virus (DENV) infections have faced several challenges, mostly related to the complexity of conducting long-term studies to evaluate vaccine efficacy and safety to rule out the risk of vaccine-induced DHS/DSS, particularly in children. At least seven DENV vaccines have undergone different phases of clinical trials; however, only three of them (Dengvaxia®, TV003, and TAK-003) have showed promising results, and are addressed in detail in this review in terms of their molecular design, efficacy, and immunogenicity. Safety-related challenges during DENV vaccine development are also discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35608749 PMCID: PMC9127483 DOI: 10.1007/s40259-022-00531-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BioDrugs ISSN: 1173-8804 Impact factor: 7.744
Candidate dengue vaccines in phase I or phase II clinical trials
| Candidate | Platform | Phase/stage | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| TDEN-LAV (WRAIR/GSK) | Live-attenuated | Phase II (Discontinued) | [ |
| TDENV-PIV (WRAIR/FioCruz/GSK) | Inactivated adjuvanted | Phase I (No recent reports) | [ |
| D1ME100/TVDV (NMRC) | DNA vaccine | Phase I (No recent updates) | [ |
| V180 (DEN-80E) (Merck/NIAD) | Recombinant (subunit) | Phase I (Published 2019) | [ |
| DENV-1-LVHC | Live-attenuated | Phase I (Published 2021) | Clinicaltrials.gov [ |
Dengue vaccines that have reach phase III or have been licensed
| Vaccine | Manufacturer | Platform | Efficacy | Comments | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CYT-TDV Dengvaxia® | Sanofi Pasteur | YFV ∆30 backbone | 25–59% | Increases hospitalizations in seronegative vaccinees | [ |
TAK-003 (DENVax) | Takeda/Inviragen | Attenuated DENV-2 backbone for the four serotypes | 73.3–85.3% | Well tolerated in adolescents and children | [ |
LATV TV003/TV005 | NIAD/Butantan/Merck | DENV-1,3,4 ∆30 and rDENV2/4 ∆30 | Not yet released | Single dose | [ |
Fig. 1Molecular design of the anti-dengue virus (DENV) vaccines in advanced stages of clinical development. A Dengvaxia® is based on a yellow fever backbone in which the pre-membrane (prM) and envelope (E) genes of YFV have been replaced by the homologous genes from each one of the four DENV serotypes [16, 17]. B TV003/TV005 was constructed by a deletion of 30 nucleotides (172–143) in the TL2 stem-loop of the 3′-UTR of DENV-4 and DENV-1 (rDEN4∆30 and rDEN1∆30), DENV-2 and DENV-3 components were constructed from the rDEN4∆30 backbone [21, 22]. C Tak-003/DENVax is based on a live-attenuated DENV-2 strain (PDK-53-V) in which the pre-membrane (prM) and envelope (E) genes of YFV have been replaced by the homologous genes from each one of the four DENV serotypes [27]
Fig. 2Overview of the efficacy trials of anti-dengue virus (DENV) vaccines in children in Latin America and Asia. Phase III clinical trials have been conducted for Dengvaxia and DENVax with mixed results. TV003/TV005 is currently undergoing phase III clinical trials. *The seroconversion rates for TV003/TV005 observed in phase II clinical trials are illustrated. **The lower value of the efficacy range depicted corresponds to the efficacy observed during the phase IIb trial conducted in Thailand. ***DENVax was only efficacious against DENV-1 and DENV-2 in seronegative individuals [38, 86]
Fig. 3Schematic representation of antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) in dengue virus (DENV) infection. Low levels of anti-DENV antibodies (< 1:80) against one DENV serotype promote the formation of virus-immune complexes during secondary infections with a heterologous DENV serotype. These virus-immune complexes are internalized into monocytes, macrophages and dendritic cells via the Fcγ receptor, promoting viral release into the cell cytoplasm. Virus-immune complexes modulate innate immune pathways promoting viral replication and release
Dengue vaccine characteristics
| Molecular design | Efficacy | Main side effects | Immunogenicity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dengvaxia® | DENV-1 (prM-E) YFV-17D genome DENV-2 (prM-E) YFV-17D genome DENV-3 (prM-E) YFV-17D genome DENV-4 (prM-E) YFV-17D genome | 45–65% 44.6% under 9 yo 65.6% over 9 yo | Injection site pain, headache, malaise, low-grade fever, among others | CD8+ reponse mostly to NS3 and neutralizing antibodies mostly against DENV-4 |
| [ | [ | [ | [ | |
| TV003/TV005 | Complete DENV-1 Δ30 (3´UTR) DENV-2 (prM-E) in DENV-4 Δ30 (3´UTR) Complete DENV-3 Δ30 (3´UTR) Complete DENV-4 Δ30 (3´UTR) | Low grade rash | Reported as close to sterilizing Strong neutralizing antibodies in rhesus macaques | |
| [ | Data not available | [ | [ | |
| TAK003 (DENVax) | DENV-1 (prM-E) in DENV-2 genome* DENV-2 complete genome* DENV-3 (prM-E) in DENV-2 genome* DENV-4 (prM-E) in DENV-2 genome* *Referring to genetic construction | 74.9–76.1% in seropositive (previously exposed) 66.2–82.2% in seronegative ( | Transient local reactogenicity and mild systemic adverse events | Neutralizing antibodies against all four serotypes |
| [ | [ | [ | [ |
| Dengue vaccine development has been challenging because of the need to provide protection against all four dengue serotypes to avoid potentially causing antibody-dependent enhancement in further infections. |
| Denvaxia® is currently the only licenced vaccine, but phase III clinical trials with two other vaccines, TV-003/TV-005 and TAK-003, are currently ongoing, with promising results. |