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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Falciparum malaria vaccine candidates have been developed using recombinant, replication-deficient serotype 5 and 35 adenoviruses (Ad5, Ad35) encoding the Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite surface protein (CSP) (Ad5.CS, Ad35.CS) (Crucell Holland BV, Leiden, The Netherlands). To evaluate the immunogenicity of these constructs, BALB/cJ mice were immunized twice with either Ad5.CS, Ad35.CS, empty Ad5-vector (eAd5), empty Ad35 vector (eAd35), or saline. Another group received the CSP-based
RTS
,S
malaria
vaccine formulated in the proprietary Adjuvant System AS01B (GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals, Rixensart, Belgium). Here we report that Ad5.CS, Ad35.CS, and
RTS
,S/AS01B, elicited both cellular and serologic CSP antigen-specific responses in mice. These adenoviral vectors induce strong
malaria
-specific immunity and warrant further evaluation.
...
PMID:Adenovirus 5 and 35 vectors expressing Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite surface protein elicit potent antigen-specific cellular IFN-gamma and antibody responses in mice. 1845 76
The demonstration of efficacy of two candidate
malaria
vaccines in children living in
malaria
-endemic areas, namely
RTS
,S from the circumsporozoite protein that reduced infection and clinical
malaria
in Mozambique, and an asexual blood-stage vaccine combining MSP1/MSP2/RESA that reduced parasite density in Papua New Guinea, allows one to believe that a
malaria
vaccine will be available for the fight against
malaria
in the next decade. Even if long-lasting impregnated bednets and indoor residual spraying have proven to be effective in reducing
malaria
transmission, these interventions may not be sufficient in the long-run since they rely on too few compounds and are, thus, vulnerable to the emergence of resistance. New tools, such as
malaria
vaccines, may, therefore, provide an added value to achieve the goal of local elimination and subsequent eradication of
malaria
. A promising candidate for that purpose would be a highly efficacious multicomponent vaccine that includes at least a sexual-stage antigen, the appropriate initial setting would be an area with low endemicity and limited population exchange, and the most suitable mode of delivery would be mass vaccination. For nonimmune populations, such as travelers visiting
malaria
-endemic areas, the usefulness of the first generation of
malaria
vaccine(s) will be limited, since the level of protection that is foreseen is unlikely to achieve that of
malaria
chemoprophylaxis. Only long-term travelers, expatriates and soldiers might realistically benefit from a pre-erythrocytic and/or blood-stage vaccine with an intermediate level of efficacy.
...
PMID:Malaria vaccines: a toy for travelers or a tool for eradication? 1856 15
RTS
,S is a pre-erythrocytic
malaria
vaccine candidate antigen based on the circumsporozoite surface protein of Plasmodium falciparum fused to HBsAg, incorporating a novel Adjuvant System (AS02). The first field efficacy of
RTS
,S/AS02 against infection was demonstrated in a trial initiated in The Gambia in 1998. This paper presents the five-year safety and immunogenicity follow up of the 306 men who were enrolled in the original trial. In the primary study men aged 18 to 45 years were randomized to receive either
RTS
,S/AS02 or rabies vaccine at 0, 1, 5 months followed by a booster dose at month 19. The subjects were observed for long term safety and immunogenicity continuously until month 58. Of the 153 subjects in each group at enrollment, 80 (52%) subjects in the
RTS
,S/AS02 group and 83 (54%) subjects in the rabies group returned for the final long-term follow-up visit at month 58. The main reason for non-attendance at month 58 was migration (76% of all drop-outs). Nine subjects in the
RTS
,S/AS02 group and seven in the rabies group experienced serious adverse events (SAEs) over the 58 month surveillance period, of which seven had a fatal outcome (five
RTS
,S/AS02 and two rabies group). None of the SAEs with fatal outcome were attributed to the study vaccine. Anti-CS antibody persistence compared to control was observed for five years, although titres had waned from post-booster levels; similar responses in anti-HBs antibody persistence were observed in initially HBsAg seronegative subjects. This study provides the first indication of the long-term safety and persistence of anti-CS and anti-HBs antibodies of the
RTS
,S vaccine candidate in combination with the novel AS02 Adjuvant System.
...
PMID:Five-year safety and immunogenicity of GlaxoSmithKline's candidate malaria vaccine RTS,S/AS02 following administration to semi-immune adult men living in a malaria-endemic region of The Gambia. 1927 46
The renewed interest in
malaria
research and control is based on the intolerable toll this disease takes on young children and pregnant women in Africa and other vulnerable populations; 150 to 300 children die each hour from
malaria
amounting to 1 to 2 million deaths yearly.
Malaria
-induced neurologic impairment, anemia, hypoglycemia, and low birth weight imperil normal development and survival. Resistance of Plasmodium falciparum to drugs and Anopheles mosquitoes to insecticides has stimulated discovery and development of artemisinin-based combination treatments (ACTs) and other drugs, long-lasting insecticide-treated bednets (with synthetic pyrethroids) and a search for non-toxic, long-lasting, affordable insecticides for indoor residual spraying (IRS).
Malaria
vaccine development and testing are progressing rapidly and a recombinant protein (
RTS
,S/AS02A) directed against the circumsporozoite protein is soon to be in Phase 3 trials. Support for
malaria
control, research, and advocacy through the Global Fund for HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and
Malaria
, the U.S. President's
Malaria
Initiative, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, WHO and other organizations is resulting in decreasing morbidity and mortality in many malarious countries. Sustainability of effective programs through training and institution strengthening will be the key to
malaria
elimination coupled with improved surveillance and targeted research.
...
PMID:Eradicating malaria. 1954 98
Results from clinical trials in areas where
malaria
is endemic have shown that immunization with
RTS
,S/AS02A
malaria
vaccine candidate induces partial protection in adults and children and cellular effector and memory responses in adults. For the first time in a
malaria
vaccine trial, we sought to assess the cell-mediated immune responses to
RTS
,S antigen components in infants under 1 year of age participating in a clinical phase I/IIb trial of
RTS
,S/AS02D in Mozambique. Circumsporozoite protein (CSP)-specific responses were detected in approximately half of
RTS
,S-immunized infants and included gamma interferon (IFN-gamma), interleukin-2 (IL-2), and combined IL-2/IL-4 responses. The median stimulation indices of cytokine-producing CD4(+) and CD8(+) cells were very low but significantly higher in
RTS
,S-immunized infants than in infants that received the comparator vaccine. Protection against subsequent malarial infection tended to be associated with a higher percentage of individuals with CSP-specific IL-2 in the supernatant (P = 0.053) and with higher CSP-specific IFN-gamma-producing CD8(+) T-cell responses (P = 0.07). These results report for the first time the detection of
malaria
-specific cellular immune responses after vaccination of infants less than 1 year of age and pave the way for future field studies of cellular immunity to
malaria
vaccine candidates.
...
PMID:Plasmodium falciparum-specific cellular immune responses after immunization with the RTS,S/AS02D candidate malaria vaccine in infants living in an area of high endemicity in Mozambique. 1965 72
RTS
,S is the world's most advanced
malaria
vaccine candidate and is intended to protect infants and young children living in
malaria
endemic areas of sub-Saharan Africa against clinical disease caused by Plasmodium falciparum. Recently, a pivotal Phase III efficacy trial of
RTS
,S began in Africa. The goal of the programme has been to develop a vaccine that will be safe and effective when administered via the Expanded Program for Immunization (EPI) and significantly reduce the risk of clinically important
malaria
disease during the first years of life. If a similar reduction in the risk of severe
malaria
and other important co-morbidities associated with
malaria
infection can be achieved, then the vaccine could become a major new tool for reducing the burden of
malaria
in sub-Saharan Africa. Encouraging data from the ongoing phase II programme suggest that these goals may indeed be achievable. This review discusses some of the unique challenges that were faced during the development of this vaccine, highlights the complexity of developing new vaccine technologies and illustrates the power of partnerships in the ongoing fight against this killer disease.
...
PMID:The development of the RTS,S malaria vaccine candidate: challenges and lessons. 1969 54
The
RTS
,S/AS01(E)
malaria
vaccine candidate has recently entered Phase 3 testing. Reaching this important milestone is the culmination of more than 20 years of research and development by GlaxoSmithKline and partners and collaborators. The vaccine has been developed to protect young children and infants living in Sub-Saharan Africa against clinical and severe disease caused by Plasmodium falciparum infection. Over the past 9 years,
RTS
,S/AS has been evaluated in multiple Phase 2 studies. The vaccine was shown to have a favorable safety profile and to be well tolerated in all age groups in which it was tested, including the intended target population of infants and young children in Sub-Saharan Africa. Data obtained so far suggest that
RTS
,S/AS can be co-administered with other vaccines included in the routine Expanded Program of Immunization (EPI). In Phase 2 testing, the vaccine candidate was shown to confer significant protection against P. falciparum infection and clinical disease, including severe
malaria
. Furthermore, a trend towards an indirect beneficial effect of the vaccine on non-malarial morbidities has been observed in several trials. In this paper, we will describe the genesis of the
RTS
,S/AS concept, including the rationale for selecting the circumsporozoite protein (CSP) as the target antigen. Early development history of the vaccine will be briefly described. We will present the most salient results from recent Phase 2 studies conducted in the target pediatric population, which have led to the decision to progress
RTS
,S/AS to Phase 3 testing. If the Phase 3 results confirm the observations made during Phase 2 testing, the
RTS
,S/AS vaccine, when broadly implemented and judiciously integrated with other
malaria
-prevention measures, would have a major public-health impact in Sub-Saharan Africa.
...
PMID:From the circumsporozoite protein to the RTS, S/AS candidate vaccine. 1980 9
Malaria
remains one of the most significant infectious diseases affecting human populations in developing countries. The quest for an efficacious
malaria
vaccine has been ongoing for nearly a century with limited success. The identification of
malaria
parasite antigens focused efforts on the development of subunit vaccines but has so far yielded only one partially efficacious vaccine candidate,
RTS
/S. The lack of high vaccine efficacy observed to date with subunit vaccine candidates raises doubts that the development of a single antigen or even a multi-antigen
malaria
subunit vaccine is possible. Fortunately, it has been demonstrated in animal studies and experimental clinical studies that immunizations with live-attenuated sporozoite stages of the
malaria
parasite confer long lasting, sterile protection against infection, providing a benchmark for vaccine development. These early successful vaccinations with live-attenuated
malaria
parasites did not however, promote a developmental path forward for such a vaccine approach. The discovery of genetically engineered parasite strains that are fully attenuated during the early asymptomatic liver infection and confer complete sterile protection in animal
malaria
models support the development of a live attenuated sporozoite vaccine for Plasmodium falciparum and its accelerated safety and efficacy testing in
malaria
challenge models and in
malaria
endemic areas.
...
PMID:Genetically engineered, attenuated whole-cell vaccine approaches for malaria. 1983 68
In an effort to broaden the immune response induced by the
RTS
,S/AS02(A),vaccine, we have evaluated the immunogenicity of the
RTS
,S antigen when combined with MSP1(42) and with AMA1, antigens derived from the asexual blood stage. The objectives of this study were (i) to determine whether MSP1(42) and AMA1 vaccines formulated with the AS02(A) Adjuvant System were safe and immunogenic in the rhesus monkey model; (ii) to investigate whether MSP1(42) or AMA1 induced immune interference to each other, or to
RTS
,S, when added singly or in combinations at a single injection site; (iii) in the event of immune interference, to determine if this could be reduced when antigens were administered at separate sites. We found that MSP1(42) and AMA1 were safe and immunogenic, eliciting antibodies, and Th1 and Th2 responses using IFN-gamma and IL-5 as markers. When
malaria
antigens were delivered together in one formulation, MSP1(42) and
RTS
,S reduced AMA1-specific antibody responses as measured by ELISA however, only MSP1(42) lowered parasite growth inhibitory activity of anti-AMA1 antibodies as measured by in vitro growth inhibition assay. Unlike
RTS
,S, MSP1(42) significantly reduced AMA1 IFN-gamma and IL-5 responses. MSP1(42) suppression of AMA1 IFN-gamma responses was not seen in animals receiving
RTS
,S+AMA1+MSP1(42) suggesting that
RTS
,S restored IFN-gamma responses. Conversely, AMA1 had no effect on MSP1(42) antibody and IFN-gamma and IL-5 responses. Neither AMA1 alone or combined with MSP1(42) affected
RTS
,S antibody or IFN-gamma and IL-5 responses. Immune interference by MSP1(42) on AMA1 antibody responses was also evident when AMA1, MSP1(42) and
RTS
,S were administered concurrently at separate sites. These results suggest that immune interference may be complex and should be considered for the design of multi-antigen, multi-stage vaccines against
malaria
.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the safety and immunogenicity of Plasmodium falciparum apical membrane antigen 1, merozoite surface protein 1 or RTS,S vaccines with adjuvant system AS02A administered alone or concurrently in rhesus monkeys. 1985 48
Malaria
kills more than a million people a year, causes malady in about three hundred million people and poses risk to approximately 40% of the world's population living in malarious countries. This disease is re-emerging mainly due to the development of drug-resistant parasites and insecticide-resistant mosquitoes. Therefore, we are now forced to resort to remedy through vaccination. Until now, not even a single licensed
malaria
vaccine has been developed despite intensive efforts. Even the efficacy of
RTS
,S, the most advanced and promising vaccine candidate in the pipeline of
malaria
vaccine development, was only around 50% based on a number of clinical trials. These facts urge
malaria
researchers to urgently enrich this pipeline, as much as possible, with potential vaccine candidates. With the availability of
malaria
genome database, the enrichment of this pipeline is possible if we could now employ an efficient protein expression technology to decode the
malaria
genomic data, without any codon optimization, into quality recombinant proteins. Then, these synthesized recombinant proteins can be characterized and screened for discovering novel potential vaccine targets. The wheat germ cell-free protein synthesis system will be a promising tool to this end. This review highlights the recent successes in synthesizing quality
malaria
proteins using this tool.
...
PMID:The wheat germ cell-free protein synthesis system: a key tool for novel malaria vaccine candidate discovery. 1991 90
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