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Vaccine Detail
P. falciparum recombinant vector vaccine MVA.ME-TRAP |
Vaccine Information |
- Vaccine Name: P. falciparum recombinant vector vaccine MVA.ME-TRAP
- Target Pathogen: Plasmodium spp.
- Target Disease: Malaria
- Type: Recombinant vector vaccine
- Status: Research
- Host Species as Laboratory Animal Model: Human
- Immunization Route: Intramuscular injection (i.m.)
- Description: A prime boost P. falciparum vaccine that utilizes FP9 and MVA as recombinant vectors for priming and boosting, respectively (Webster et al., 2005).
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Host Response |
Human Response
- Vaccination Protocol: FFM Regime: FP9 priming, either once or twice, followed by MVA boosting (Webster et al., 2005).
- Vaccine Immune Response Type: VO_0000286
- Immune Response: Vaccine regimes with FP9 as the priming agent induced significantly more CD8+ T cells in addition to the CD4+ T cells. This finding suggests that induced CD8+ T cell responses may be of particular value in vaccination against liver-stage malaria (Webster et al., 2005).
- Efficacy: Two of five subjects who went on to a malaria challenge conducted 14 days after their final vaccination were completely protected. These two subjects were entered, without further vaccinations, into a second malaria challenge 6 months later in which one subject (137) remained completely protected. In addition, all 17 subjects immunized with this FFM regime (FP9 priming, once or twice, followed by MVA boosting) who underwent challenge, overall, compared with nonvaccinees, had a significant delay in time to onset of parasitemia (Webster et al., 2005).
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References |
Webster et al., 2005: Webster DP, Dunachie S, Vuola JM, Berthoud T, Keating S, Laidlaw SM, McConkey SJ, Poulton I, Andrews L, Andersen RF, Bejon P, Butcher G, Sinden R, Skinner MA, Gilbert SC, Hill AV. Enhanced T cell-mediated protection against malaria in human challenges by using the recombinant poxviruses FP9 and modified vaccinia virus Ankara. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 2005; 102(13); 4836-4841. [PubMed: 15781866].
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