| Literature DB >> 35967410 |
Kriti Negi1, Ashima Bhaskar1, Ved Prakash Dwivedi1.
Abstract
The pursuit to improve the TB control program comprising one approved vaccine, M. bovis Bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG) has directed researchers to explore progressive approaches to halt the eternal TB pandemic. Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) was first identified as the causative agent of TB in 1882 by Dr. Robert Koch. However, TB has plagued living beings since ancient times and continues to endure as an eternal scourge ravaging even with existing chemoprophylaxis and preventive therapy. We have scientifically come a long way since then, but despite accessibility to the standard antimycobacterial antibiotics and prophylactic vaccine, almost one-fourth of humankind is infected latently with M.tb. Existing therapeutics fail to control TB, due to the upsurge of drug-resistant strains and increasing incidents of co-infections in immune-compromised individuals. Unresponsiveness to established antibiotics leaves patients with no therapeutic possibilities. Hence the search for an efficacious TB immunization strategy is a global health priority. Researchers are paving the course for efficient vaccination strategies with the radically advanced operation of core principles of protective immune responses against M.tb. In this review; we have reassessed the progression of the TB vaccination program comprising BCG immunization in children and potential stratagems to reinforce BCG-induced protection in adults.Entities:
Keywords: BCG; adjunct vaccination strategies against tuberculosis; host directed therapy; immunotherapy; memory T cells; vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35967410 PMCID: PMC9365942 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.944183
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Desired characteristics for novel Tuberculosis immunization approaches.
| S. No | Desired characteristics |
|---|---|
| 1. | Safe to be administered in immunocompromised individuals at risk of developing active TB |
| 2. | Expenses associated with regimen and dosage should be reasonable for high burdened developing countries. |
| 3. | Immunization strategy must lower the risk of developing active pulmonary TB in adults previously vaccinated with BCG |
| 4. | Must protect against |
| 5. | Minimum administrations requisite to elicit host protective responses |
| 6. | Evaluation of protective immune correlates by employing established assays |
| 7. | Must offer greater than 50% protective efficacy against established pulmonary TB |
Figure 1Immune responses to BCG immunization. Immune responses to the BCG vaccine initiate at the site of inoculation by induction of innate immune cells such as resident macrophages, neutrophils, and dendritic cells. Innate immune cells internalize, degrade and present antigen of bacilli via surface receptors to further activate adaptive immune cells. Chiefly, DCs loaded with bacilli drain to the lymph nodes and result in lymphocyte stimulation and activation. T and B lymphocytes further differentiate into diverse subtypes including effector and memory cells.
Figure 2Diverse factors associated with variable efficacy of BCG. Inconsistent efficacy of BCG vaccination can be linked to numerous host factors including genetics, geographical representation, ethnicity, and fragmentary immunological insight addition to variation in BCG vaccine strains with distinct characteristics.
Major TB vaccine candidates in clinical trials:.
| Vaccine candidate | Composition | Clinical Trial | Clinical trial Identifier | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| DAR-901 | Inactivated | Phase 2, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study to evaluate the efficacy of DAR-901 TB booster to prevent TB in adolescents. | NCT02712424 | ( |
| MIP | Inactivated | Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, interventional study to determine the efficacy and safety of MIP as an adjunct in Category I pulmonary TB patients | NCT00341328 | ( |
| RUTI® | Detoxified, fragmented | Phase 2, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled interventional trial to assess the therapeutic vaccine, RUTI against TB | NCT01136161, | ( |
| Vaccae™ | Heat-inactivated | Phase 3, randomized, double-blind, interventional trial to assess the safety and efficacy to prevent TB in high-risk groups of TB infection | NCT01979900 | ( |
|
| ||||
| MTBVAC | Live attenuated | Phase 3, randomized, quadruple masking intervention to determine safety, efficacy and immunogenicity in newborns | NCT04975178 | ( |
| VPM1002 | Live recombinant BCG vaccine strain with urease C deletion engineered to express listeriolysin rather than urease C | Phase 3, multicenter, double-blind, randomized, active-controlled trial to examine the safety, efficacy and immunogenicity to prevent | NCT04351685 | ( |
|
| ||||
| M72/ASO1E | Fusion protein subunit vaccine based on 32A and 39A prepared in AS01E adjuvant | Phase 2, randomized, interventional clinical trial to determine the efficacy of TB vaccine candidate in Adults | NCT01755598 | ( |
| H56:IC31 | Recombinant vaccine comprising proteins of | Phase 2, randomized (1:1), double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to determine efficacy of H56:IC31 in preventing rate of TB recurrence | NCT03512249 | ( |
| GamTBvac | Recombinant subunit vaccine formulation comprising modified Ag85a and ESAT6-CFP10 | Phase 3, randomized, multicentered, double-blind, placebo-controlled intervention to determine safety and efficaciousness of GamTBvac against pulmonary TB | NCT04975737 | ( |
| ID93/GLA-SE | ID93 is a recombinant fusion protein comprising 4 antigens from virulence-associated proteins in GLA-SE i.e., oil-in-water emulsion | Phase 2a, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind intervention to evaluate safety and effectiveness of ID93/GLA-SE in TB patients | NCT02465216 | ( |
Potential host directed immunotherapeutic approaches against M.tb infection.
| S. No. | Therapeutic candidates | Host protective immunological characteristics | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Ibuprofen | Inhibits neutrophil infiltration and detrimental inflammation at the site of infection | ( |
|
| Acetylsalicylic acid (Aspirin) | Anti-inflammatory responses reduce detrimental pathology | ( |
|
| Monosodium Urate (MSU) | Activation of immune responses to augment antimycobacterial efficacy of BCG | ( |
|
| Calcimycin | Induction of autophagy by binding to P2X7 receptors | ( |
|
| Verapamil | Inhibits LTCC channels thereby induces autophagy by increasing Ca2+ levels. | ( |
|
| Clofazimine | Enrichment of stem cell memory T memory responses upon BCG revaccination | ( |
|
| Luteolin | Inhibition of Kv1.3 K+ channels, enhancement of antimycobacterial and T cell memory immune response | ( |
|
| Rapamycin (Sirolimus) | Enhances antigen processing and presentation and directs Th1 immunity | ( |
|
| Tat-beclin-1 fusion peptide | Autophagy induction and reduction in progression of pathogens | ( |
|
| Gefitinib | Enhances lysosomal biogenesis, action and bacterial degradation | ( |
|
| 2-deoxyglucose (2-DG) | Metabolic reprograming induced reduction in pathological damage | ( |
|
| Ritonavir (Norvir) | Glucose transporter agonist induces protection against HIV as well as | ( |
|
| FX11 | Lactate dehydrogenase inhibitor reduces oxidative stress and downgrade iNOS | ( |
|
| TEPP46 | Limits inflammation by reducing PKM2 activation | ( |
|
| Metformin | Induces AMPK mediated signaling, induction of ROS and intracellular bacterial killing | ( |
|
| AICAR | Stimulate anti-microbial immune responses by | ( |
|
| C75 | Inhibits lipid derived droplets biogenesis, enhances ROS, NO production and polarizes macrophages from M1 to M2 | ( |
|
| Cerulenin | Inhibition of fatty acid synthase, uncouples UCP2 and promotes NLRP3 activation | ( |
|
| GW9662 | PPARγ antagonist can regulate inflammation and disease progression by altering metabolism in macrophages. | ( |
|
| AGK2 | Inhibits host sirtuin2 (SIRT2) and enhances bacterial clearance, host protective immune responses | ( |
Figure 3Potential of host-directed therapies (HDTs) to improve BCG efficacy. Diverse HDTs aiming at distinct pathways are under evaluation to improve clinical outcomes. HDTs restrict pathogen-induced subversion strategies to ameliorate host defenses against M.tb.
List of clinical trials evaluating BCG immunization along with diverse immunotherapeutic for efficient medical utility against diverse disease conditions.
| BCG vaccine and immunotherapeutic regimen | Clinical trial | Trial identifier | Diseased condition | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intravesical hyaluronic acid (HA) with BCG | Phase 2, randomized, pilot study to examine effect of HA in reducing BCG induced local cytotoxicity | NCT02207608 | Bladder urothelial cell carcinoma | ( |
| Tislelizumab in Combination with BCG | Phase 2, open-label, single-arm, single center trial to evaluate safety and effectiveness of Tislelizumab along with BCG (TACBIN-01) | NCT04922047 | High risk urinary bladder cancers | ( |
| Vitamin D supplementation in adjunct to BCG immunization in infants | Randomized, double masked, interventional study to evaluate impact of vitamin D supplement in infants prior to BCG vaccination | NCT01288950 | Tuberculosis | ( |
| Vitamin A with BCG Vaccine | Phase 4, randomized, double-masked intervention to evaluate the utility of high-dose vitamin A supplementation in infants along with BCG vaccine at birth | NCT00168597 | Mortality and morbidity in infants | ( |
| Monoclonal Antibody A1G4 and BCG | Phase 1 intervention to evaluate the efficacy of monoclonal antibody A1G4 along with BCG in cancer patients | NCT00003023 | * Neuroblastoma, Sarcoma | ( |