The safety of post-exposure vaccination of mice infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis

被引:20
|
作者
Derrick, Steven C. [1 ]
Perera, L. P. [2 ]
Dheenadhayalan, Veerabadran [3 ]
Yang, Amy [1 ]
Kolibab, Kristopher [1 ]
Morris, Sheldon L. [1 ]
机构
[1] US FDA, Ctr Biol Evaluat & Res, Lab Mycobacterial Dis & Cellular Immunol, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
[2] NCI, Metab Branch, Ctr Canc Res, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
[3] Aeras Global TB Vaccine Fdn, Rockville, MD 20850 USA
关键词
Tuberculosis; Vaccine; Safety;
D O I
10.1016/j.vaccine.2008.09.011
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
New post-exposure tuberculosis vaccination strategies are being developed to prevent disease in individuals latently infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. However, concerns about the potential induction of deleterious Koch-like reactions after immunization of persons with latent tuberculosis has limited progress in assessing the effectiveness of post-exposure vaccination. To evaluate the safety of immunization after M. tuberculosis infection, two mouse models were established, a drug treatment low bacterial burden model and an active disease model. Twelve different M. tuberculosis antigen preparations and vaccines (including DNA, subunit, viral vectored, and live, attenuated vaccines) were evaluated using these mouse models. In the low bacterial burden model, post-exposure vaccination did not induce significant reactivational disease and only injection of BCG evoked increases in]Ling inflammatory responses at I month after the immunizations. Additionally, although significant increases in lung inflammation were seen for animals injected with the hps65 DNA vaccine or a M. tuberculosis culture supernatant preparation, no differences in the survival periods were detected between vaccinated and non-vaccinated mice at 10 months post-immunization using the low bacterial burden model. For the active disease model, significantly more lung inflammation was observed at I month after administration of the hsp65 DNA vaccine but none of the antigen preparations tested increased the lung bacterial burdens at this early time point. Furthermore, vaccination of diseased mice with BCG or TB DNA vaccines did not significantly affect mortality rates compared to non-vaccinated controls at 10 months post-immunization. Overall, these data suggest that while the potential risk of inducing Koch-like reactions is low after immunization of persons with latent tuberculosis, extreme caution is still needed as post-exposure vaccines progress from pre-clinical experiments into the initial phases of clinical testing. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:6092 / 6098
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] EFFECT OF BCG VACCINATION ON MICE INFECTED WITH TUBERCULOSIS
    FITZPATRICK, FK
    AMERICAN REVIEW OF TUBERCULOSIS, 1953, 68 (03): : 451 - 454
  • [22] Negligible risk of inducing resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis with single-dose rifampicin as post-exposure prophylaxis for leprosy
    Liesbeth Mieras
    Richard Anthony
    Wim van Brakel
    Martin W. Bratschi
    Jacques van den Broek
    Emmanuelle Cambau
    Arielle Cavaliero
    Christa Kasang
    Geethal Perera
    Lee Reichman
    Jan Hendrik Richardus
    Paul Saunderson
    Peter Steinmann
    Wing Wai Yew
    Infectious Diseases of Poverty, 5
  • [23] Negligible risk of inducing resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis with single-dose rifampicin as post-exposure prophylaxis for leprosy
    Mieras, Liesbeth
    Anthony, Richard
    van Brakel, Wim
    Bratschi, Martin W.
    van den Broek, Jacques
    Cambau, Emmanuelle
    Cavaliero, Arielle
    Kasang, Christa
    Perera, Geethal
    Reichman, Lee
    Richardus, Jan Hendrik
    Saunderson, Paul
    Steinmann, Peter
    Yew, Wing Wai
    INFECTIOUS DISEASES OF POVERTY, 2016, 5
  • [24] Rabies post-exposure prophylactic vaccination for returning travelers to Japan
    Yamamoto, Kei
    Ujiie, Mugen
    Noguchi, Akira
    Kato, Yasuyuki
    Fujiya, Yoshihiro
    Mawatari, Momoko
    Kutsuna, Satoshi
    Takeshita, Nozomi
    Hayakawa, Kayoko
    Kanagawa, Shuzo
    Inoue, Satoshi
    Morikawa, Shigeru
    Ohmagari, Norio
    JOURNAL OF INFECTION AND CHEMOTHERAPY, 2019, 25 (12) : 931 - 935
  • [25] Assessing the safety of post-exposure rabies immunization in pregnancy
    Arya, Subhash C.
    Agarwal, Nirmala
    HUMAN VACCINES, 2007, 3 (05): : 155 - 155
  • [26] Assessing the safety of post-exposure rabies immunization in pregnancy
    Sudarshan, M. K.
    Giri, M. S. Ananda
    Mahendra, B. J.
    Venkatesh, G. M.
    Sanjay, T. V.
    Ashwath Narayana, D. H.
    Ravish, H. S.
    HUMAN VACCINES, 2007, 3 (03): : 87 - 89
  • [27] Optimal control for a tuberculosis model with reinfection and post-exposure interventions
    Silva, Cristiana J.
    Torres, Delfim F. M.
    MATHEMATICAL BIOSCIENCES, 2013, 244 (02) : 154 - 164
  • [28] Mtb32 is a promising tuberculosis antigen for DNA vaccination in pre- and post-exposure mouse models
    S-S Ahn
    B-Y Jeon
    K-S Kim
    J-Y Kwack
    E-G Lee
    K-S Park
    Y-C Sung
    S-N Cho
    Gene Therapy, 2012, 19 : 570 - 575
  • [29] Mtb32 is a promising tuberculosis antigen for DNA vaccination in pre- and post-exposure mouse models
    Ahn, S-S
    Jeon, B-Y
    Kim, K-S
    Kwack, J-Y
    Lee, E-G
    Park, K-S
    Sung, Y-C
    Cho, S-N
    GENE THERAPY, 2012, 19 (05) : 570 - 575
  • [30] Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection Interferes with HIV Vaccination in Mice
    Ignatowicz, Lech
    Mazurek, Jolanta
    Leepiyasakulchai, Chaniya
    Skold, Markus
    Hinkula, Jorma
    Kallenius, Gunilla
    Pawlowski, Andrzej
    PLOS ONE, 2012, 7 (07):