Title
Safety and immunogenicity of the recombinant BCG vaccine VPM1002 in a phase 1 open-label randomized clinical trial
Date Issued
18 February 2013
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
review article
Author(s)
Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology
Abstract
Background: Current vaccination using Mycobacterium bovis bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), fails to prevent pulmonary tuberculosis (TB). New vaccination strategies are essential for reducing the global incidence of TB. We assessed the safety and immunogenicity of VPM1002, a recombinant BCG vaccine candidate. EudraCT (2007-002789-37) and ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT00749034). Methods: Healthy volunteers were enrolled in a phase 1 open-label, dose escalation randomized clinical trial, and received one intradermal dose of VPM1002 (Mycobacterium bovis BCG ΔureC::hly HmR) or BCG. Immunogenicity was assessed by interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) production, cellular immune response markers by flow cytometry and serum antibodies against mycobacterial antigens. Results: Eighty volunteers were randomized into two groups according to previous BCG vaccination and mycobacterial exposure (BCG-naïve, n=40 and BCG-immune, n=40). In each group, 30 individuals were vaccinated with VPM1002 (randomized to three escalating doses) and 10 with BCG. VPM1002 was safe and stimulated IFN-γ-producing and multifunctional T cells, as well as antibody-producing B cells in BCG-naïve and BCG-immune individuals. Conclusions: VPM1002 was safe and immunogenic for B-cell and T-cell responses and hence will be brought forward through the clinical trial pipeline. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd.
Start page
1340
End page
1348
Volume
31
Issue
9
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Inmunología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84873446135
PubMed ID
Source
Vaccine
ISSN of the container
0264410X
Sponsor(s)
SHEK acknowledges grant support from the European and Developing Countries Clinical Trial Partnership (EDCTP) project “Collaboration and integration of tuberculosis vaccine trials in Europe and Africa” (TB-TEA), the European Union's Seventh Framework Programmes (EU-FP7) NEWTBVAC (Health-F3-2009-241745) and TRANSVAC (FP7-INFRASTRUCTURES-2008-228403). LG, CB, and BE acknowledge support from the German Ministry for Science and Education (grant no. 01KI0210 ). We acknowledge the work of the VPM study team and the FOCUS CDD team in Neuss, Germany. The authors thank Mary Louise Grossman and Steffen Rump for help in preparing the manuscript.
Sources of information:
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