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Safety and Immunogenicity of DNA Vaccines Encoding Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus Wild-Type Glycoproteins in a Phase I Clinical Trial

02/2015

Journal Article

Authors:
Sarwar, U.; Costner, P.; Enama, M.; Berkowitz, N.; Hu, Z.; Hendel, C.; Sitar, S.; Plummer, S.; Mulangu, S.; Bailer, R.; Koup, R.; Mascola, J.; Nabel, G.; Sullivan, N.; Graham, B.; Ledgerwood, J.E.; Team, T.V.R.C. 206 St

Secondary:
J Infect Dis

Volume:
211

Pagination:
549-557

URL:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25225676

Keywords:
Antibodies; Cytokines/blood; DNA; Ebola Vaccines; Ebola virus; filovirus; immunology; Marburg virus; Viral/blood/immunology

Abstract:
BACKGROUND: Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus cause severe hemorrhagic fever with high mortality and are potential bioterrorism agents. There are no available vaccines or therapeutic agents. Previous clinical trials evaluated transmembrane-deleted and point-mutation Ebolavirus glycoproteins (GPs) in candidate vaccines. Constructs evaluated in this trial encode wild-type (WT) GP from Ebolavirus Zaire and Sudan species and the Marburgvirus Angola strain expressed in a DNA vaccine. METHODS: The VRC 206 study evaluated the safety and immunogenicity of these DNA vaccines (4 mg administered intramuscularly by Biojector) at weeks 0, 4, and 8, with a homologous boost at or after week 32. Safety evaluations included solicited reactogenicity and coagulation parameters. Primary immune assessment was done by means of GP-specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. RESULTS: The vaccines were well tolerated, with no serious adverse events; 80% of subjects had positive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay results (>/=30) at week 12. The fourth DNA vaccination boosted the immune responses. CONCLUSIONS: The investigational Ebolavirus and Marburgvirus WT GP DNA vaccines were safe, well tolerated, and immunogenic in this phase I study. These results will further inform filovirus vaccine research toward a goal of inducing protective immunity by using WT GP antigens in candidate vaccine regimens.

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