Immunogenicity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Shigella Sonnel O-SPC/rBRU Conjugate Vaccine
Verified date | April 24, 2013 |
Source | National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC) |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The active ingredient of this Shigella sonnei O-SP-core conjugate vaccine is a
saccharide-protein conjugate composed of a fragment of S. sonnei LPS. The saccharide
component consists of an average of 3.5 repeat units of the O-SP plus the core region of the
LPS (O-SPC). The O-SPC is covalently bound to the recombinant non-toxic exoprotein B of
Clostridium difficile.
The objective of this phase of the study is to determine if this vaccine is safe and can
induce IgG antibody type-specific immunity to shigellosis in adults. The overall objective is
to determine if this vaccine can elicit higher levels of IgG antibody than the previous
experimental vaccines made with the full length O-SP, shown to be >70% efficacious in greater
than or equal to3 year old children, to induce type-specific immunity to shigellosis in
younger children.
Sixty 18-49 years-old healthy adults will be recruited in Israel. Volunteers will be
vaccinated on a random basis with one i.m. injection of 10 or 25 micrograms of the
investigational conjugate vaccine. Local and systemic reactions will be observed at 30
minutes, and the volunteers will be instructed to take their temperature and examine the
injection site for redness and swelling and fill out a questionnaire at 6, hours and daily
for 7 days after vaccination. The volunteers will visit the clinic at 24 or 48 hours
following the injection and any time they request it. The study will commence with 5
volunteers injected with the 10ug dose to be followed, if no severe adverse reactions occur,
by 5 volunteers injected with the 25ug dose. If a severe adverse reaction occurs on 1 of the
5 volunteers in either group, 5 more will be injected with that dose. If there are no severe
adverse reactions the study will proceed. If there is one more severe reaction the study will
be halted and re-evaluated by the IRB and the FDA.
Vaccine-induced antibodies will be measured at 1 and 6 months after immunization, and
compared to those elicited by our previous S. sonnei conjugate vaccines.
There is a body of evidence that a critical level of serum IgG antibody to the O-specific
polysaccharide domain of LPS confers type-specific immunity to S. sonnei as well as to other
Shigella:
1. Shigellosis is rarely observed in infants up to the age of 4-6 months. The most obvious
explanation for this is that maternally-derived serum IgG provides this immunity;
2. There is an age-related development of IgG anti-LPS antibodies that, in many instances,
is not induced by the homologous bacteria but by non-pathogenic cross-reacting enteric
bacteria;
3. The highest incidence, morbidity, and mortality occur during 6 months to 6 years of age
when the maternally-derived serum anti-O-SP has waned and the naturally-derived
antibodies have not yet appeared;
4. One injection of a S. sonnei-rEPA conjugate showed significant protection against
shigellosis in Israeli Defense Force soldiers. Vaccinees who developed shigellosis
showed significantly lower serum IgG responses to the homologous LPS than those did
not.The high antibody level induced by the conjugate vaccine indicates the positive
correlation between the serum IgG anti-LPS levels and immunity to S. sonnei infection;
5. Following Phase 1 and Phase 2 studies that showed safety and age-related immunogenicity,
a double-blinded randomized and vaccine-controlled Phase 3 evaluation of S. sonnei and
S. flexneri type 2a O-specific polysaccharide (O-SP) protein conjugates was conducted
among 1-4 year-olds in Israel.
For recipients of the S. sonnei conjugate 71.1% efficacy was shown among 3-4 year-old
recipients, no efficacy was shown for recipients of S. flexneri 2a. There was no
statistically significant efficacy for either vaccine in the 1-3 year-olds. Levels of serum
IgG anti-O-SP were elevated according to the vaccine the children received but G.M. levels
declined rapidly several months after the last injection. Our interpretation is that the
age-related efficacy of the Shigella conjugates was due to the conjugate-induced O-SP
antibody levels. Accordingly, we have developed a method to increase the immunogenicity of
the conjugates to approach the antibody levels of Israeli soldiers shown to be protected by
our S. sonnei O-SP.
Low-molecular-mass O-SP-core (O-SPC) fragments were isolated from S. sonnei LPS, and bound by
their reducing ends to the carrier protein. The O-SPC conjugates used oxime linkages between
the terminal Kdo residues at the reducing ends of the S. sonnei saccharides and aminooxy
linkers bound to the carrier. The coupling reaction was carried out at a neutral pH and room
temperature. The carrier protein was a mutant non-toxic Clostridium difficile exotoxin B. IgG
antibody levels induced in young outbred mice by this new S. sonnei O-SPC conjugate were
significantly higher than those elicited by the O-SP conjugates.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 60 |
Est. completion date | April 24, 2013 |
Est. primary completion date | April 24, 2013 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 49 Years |
Eligibility |
- ELIGIBILITY AND EXCLUSION CRITERIA: Healthy adults, 18 to 49 years of age of either sex who do not have any of the following conditions will be eligible to participate: 1. A chronic or progressive disease requiring chronic medication, 2. History of splenectomy or abnormal immune system, 3. History of neurological symptoms or signs, or mental illness, 4. Anaphylactic shock following administration of any vaccine or any other severe allergic reaction, 5. Women who are pregnant or intend to become pregnant during the vaccine study, 6. Had S. sonnei shigellosis in the past year or received a S. sonnei vaccine previously, 7. Have received systemic steroids during the month preceding Shigella vaccination, 8. Had cancer, HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis B or C, Guillain Barre Syndrome, chronic skin disease or have abnormal liver functions or blood counts. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Israel | Schneider Children's Hospital | Petach Tikva |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) |
Israel,
Dagan R, Eskola J, Leclerc C, Leroy O. Reduced response to multiple vaccines sharing common protein epitopes that are administered simultaneously to infants. Infect Immun. 1998 May;66(5):2093-8. — View Citation
Passwell JH, Ashkenazi S, Banet-Levi Y, Ramon-Saraf R, Farzam N, Lerner-Geva L, Even-Nir H, Yerushalmi B, Chu C, Shiloach J, Robbins JB, Schneerson R; Israeli Shigella Study Group. Age-related efficacy of Shigella O-specific polysaccharide conjugates in 1-4-year-old Israeli children. Vaccine. 2010 Mar 2;28(10):2231-2235. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2009.12.050. Epub 2010 Jan 5. Erratum in: Vaccine. 2019 Aug 23;37(36):5504. — View Citation
Zilberberg MD. Assessment of reporting bias for Clostridium difficile hospitalizations, United States. Emerg Infect Dis. 2008 Aug;14(8):1334. doi: 10.3201/eid1408.080446. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Vaccine safety | |||
Secondary | Induction of IgG antibody type-specific immunity to shigellosis in adults. | |||
Secondary | Tertiary: Induction of higher levels of IgG antibody than the previous experimental vaccines made with full length O-SP for type specific immunity to shigellosis in younger children. |
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