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Safety and immunogenicity of influenza A H5 subunit vaccines: effect of vaccine schedule and antigenic variant
Belshe, Robert B; Frey, Sharon E; Graham, Irene; Mulligan, Mark J; Edupuganti, Srilatha; Jackson, Lisa A; Wald, Anna; Poland, Gregory; Jacobson, Robert; Keyserling, Harry L; Spearman, Paul; Hill, Heather; Wolff, Mark
BACKGROUND:The current US national stockpile of influenza H5 vaccine was produced using the antigen from the strain A/Vietnam/1203/2004 (a clade 1 H5 virus). Recent H5 disease has been caused by antigenically divergent H5 viruses, including A/Indonesia/05/2005 (a clade 2 H5 virus). METHODS:The influence of schedule on the antibody response to 2 doses of H5 vaccines (one a clade 1 hemagglutinin protein [HA] vaccine and one a clade 2 HA vaccine) containing 90 μg of antigen was evaluated in healthy adults 18-49 years of age. RESULTS:Two doses of vaccine were required to induce antibody titers ≥ 1:10 in most subjects. Accelerated schedules were immunogenic, and antibody developed after vaccinations on days 0 and 7, 0 and 14, and 0 and 28, with the day 0 and 7 schedule inducing lower titers than those induced with the other schedules. With mixed vaccine schedules of clade 1 followed by clade 2 vaccine administration, the first vaccination primed for a heterologous boost. The heterologous response was improved when the second vaccination was given 6 months after the first, compared with the response when the second vaccination was given after an interval of 1 month. CONCLUSIONS:An accelerated vaccine schedule of injections administered at days 0 and 14 was as immunogenic as a vaccine schedule of injections at days 0 and 28, but both schedules were inferior to a vaccine schedule of injections administered at 0 and 6 months for priming for heterologous vaccine boosting. Clinical Trial Registry Number: NCT00703053.
PMCID:3071280
PMID: 21282194
ISSN: 1537-6613
CID: 3241932
Broadly cross-reactive antibodies dominate the human B cell response against 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza virus infection (vol 208, pg 181, 2011) [Correction]
Wrammert, Jens; Koutsonanos, Dimitrios; Li, Gui-Mei; Edupuganti, Srilatha; Sui, Jianhua; Morrissey, Michael; McCausland, Megan; Skountzou, Ioanna; Hornig, Mady; Lipkin, W. Ian; Mehta, Aneesh; Razavi, Behzad; Del Rio, Carlos; Zheng, Nai-Ying; Lee, Jane-Hwei; Huang, Min; Ali, Zahida; Kaur, Kaval; Andrews, Sarah; Amara, Rama Rao; Wang, Youliang; Das, Suman Ranjan; O'Donnell, Christopher David; Yewdell, Jon W.; Subbarao, Kanta; Marasco, Wayne A.; Mulligan, Mark J.; Compans, Richard; Ahmed, Rafi; Wilson, Patrick C.
ISI:000287366300017
ISSN: 0022-1007
CID: 3242402
Broadly cross-reactive antibodies dominate the human B cell response against 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza virus infection
Wrammert, Jens; Koutsonanos, Dimitrios; Li, Gui-Mei; Edupuganti, Srilatha; Sui, Jianhua; Morrissey, Michael; McCausland, Megan; Skountzou, Ioanna; Hornig, Mady; Lipkin, W Ian; Mehta, Aneesh; Razavi, Behzad; Del Rio, Carlos; Zheng, Nai-Ying; Lee, Jane-Hwei; Huang, Min; Ali, Zahida; Kaur, Kaval; Andrews, Sarah; Amara, Rama Rao; Wang, Youliang; Das, Suman Ranjan; O'Donnell, Christopher David; Yewdell, Jon W; Subbarao, Kanta; Marasco, Wayne A; Mulligan, Mark J; Compans, Richard; Ahmed, Rafi; Wilson, Patrick C
The 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza pandemic demonstrated the global health threat of reassortant influenza strains. Herein, we report a detailed analysis of plasmablast and monoclonal antibody responses induced by pandemic H1N1 infection in humans. Unlike antibodies elicited by annual influenza vaccinations, most neutralizing antibodies induced by pandemic H1N1 infection were broadly cross-reactive against epitopes in the hemagglutinin (HA) stalk and head domain of multiple influenza strains. The antibodies were from cells that had undergone extensive affinity maturation. Based on these observations, we postulate that the plasmablasts producing these broadly neutralizing antibodies were predominantly derived from activated memory B cells specific for epitopes conserved in several influenza strains. Consequently, most neutralizing antibodies were broadly reactive against divergent H1N1 and H5N1 influenza strains. This suggests that a pan-influenza vaccine may be possible, given the right immunogen. Antibodies generated potently protected and rescued mice from lethal challenge with pandemic H1N1 or antigenically distinct influenza strains, making them excellent therapeutic candidates.
PMCID:3023136
PMID: 21220454
ISSN: 1540-9538
CID: 3241922
Time will tell: community acceptability of HIV vaccine research before and after the "Step Study" vaccine discontinuation
Frew, Paula M; Mulligan, Mark J; Hou, Su-I; Chan, Kayshin; del Rio, Carlos
OBJECTIVE: This study examines whether men-who-have-sex-with-men (MSM) and transgender (TG) persons' attitudes, beliefs, and risk perceptions toward human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccine research have been altered as a result of the negative findings from a phase 2B HIV vaccine study. DESIGN: We conducted a cross-sectional survey among MSM and TG persons (N = 176) recruited from community settings in Atlanta from 2007 to 2008. The first group was recruited during an active phase 2B HIV vaccine trial in which a candidate vaccine was being evaluated (the "Step Study"), and the second group was recruited after product futility was widely reported in the media. METHODS: Descriptive statistics, t tests, and chi-square tests were conducted to ascertain differences between the groups, and ordinal logistic regressions examined the influences of the above-mentioned factors on a critical outcome, future HIV vaccine study participation. The ordinal regression outcomes evaluated the influences on disinclination, neutrality, and inclination to study participation. RESULTS: Behavioral outcomes such as future recruitment, event attendance, study promotion, and community mobilization did not reveal any differences in participants' intentions between the groups. However, we observed greater interest in HIV vaccine study screening (t = 1.07, P < 0.05) and enrollment (t = 1.15, P < 0.05) following negative vaccine findings. Means on perceptions, attitudes, and beliefs did not differ between the groups. Before this development, only beliefs exhibited a strong relationship on the enrollment intention (β = 2.166, P = 0.002). However, the effect disappeared following negative trial results, with the positive assessment of the study-site perceptions being the only significant contributing factor on enrollment intentions (β = 1.369, P = 0.011). CONCLUSION: Findings show greater enrollment intention among this population in the wake of negative efficacy findings from the Step Study. The resolve of this community to find an HIV vaccine is evident. Moreover, any exposure to information disseminated in the public arena did not appear to negatively influence the potential for future participation in HIV vaccine studies among this population. The results suggest that subsequent studies testing candidate vaccines could be conducted in this population.
PMCID:2996614
PMID: 21152413
ISSN: 1179-1519
CID: 3241912
An extended model of reasoned action to understand the influence of individual- and network-level factors on African Americans' participation in HIV vaccine research
Frew, Paula M; Archibald, Matthew; Diallo, Dazon Dixon; Hou, Su-I; Horton, Takeia; Chan, Kayshin; Mulligan, Mark J; del Rio, Carlos
In the United States, the number and proportion of HIV/AIDS cases among black/African Americans continue to highlight the need for new biomedical prevention interventions, including an HIV vaccine, microbicide, or new antiretroviral (ARV) prevention strategies such as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) to complement existing condom usage, harm reduction methods, and behavioral change strategies to stem the HIV epidemic. Although black/African Americans are disproportionately impacted by HIV/AIDS, their participation in HIV clinical research continues to have unique challenges. We theorize that interaction among multilevel factors creates ideal alignment for minority participation in HIV clinical studies. Thus, we initially set out to test an extended model of reasoned action with 362 participants to understand the interplay of sociopsychological and network-level considerations influencing minority participation in HIV prevention research efforts. In this study, we linked the intrapersonal dimensions of attitudes, beliefs, and normative concerns to community-level components, appraisal of involvement with the clinical research organization, an entity which operates within a networked structure of community partner agencies, and identification with coalition advocacy aims. Various participatory outcomes were explored including involvement in future HIV vaccine community functions, participation in community promotion of HIV vaccine research, and community mobilization. Three-stage least squares estimates indicated similar findings across three models. Significant effects demonstrate the importance of positive attitudes toward HIV vaccine research, favorable health research beliefs, perceived social support for participation, HIV/AIDS issue engagement, and perceived relevance of the clinical research site's mission and values. Identification of these nuanced pathway effects provides implications for tailored community program development.
PMCID:2858782
PMID: 20012200
ISSN: 1573-6695
CID: 3241892
The yellow fever virus vaccine induces a broad and polyfunctional human memory CD8+ T cell response
Akondy, Rama S; Monson, Nathan D; Miller, Joseph D; Edupuganti, Srilatha; Teuwen, Dirk; Wu, Hong; Quyyumi, Farah; Garg, Seema; Altman, John D; Del Rio, Carlos; Keyserling, Harry L; Ploss, Alexander; Rice, Charles M; Orenstein, Walter A; Mulligan, Mark J; Ahmed, Rafi
The live yellow fever vaccine (YF-17D) offers a unique opportunity to study memory CD8(+) T cell differentiation in humans following an acute viral infection. We have performed a comprehensive analysis of the virus-specific CD8(+) T cell response using overlapping peptides spanning the entire viral genome. Our results showed that the YF-17D vaccine induces a broad CD8(+) T cell response targeting several epitopes within each viral protein. We identified a dominant HLA-A2-restricted epitope in the NS4B protein and used tetramers specific for this epitope to track the CD8(+) T cell response over a 2 year period. This longitudinal analysis showed the following. 1) Memory CD8(+) T cells appear to pass through an effector phase and then gradually down-regulate expression of activation markers and effector molecules. 2) This effector phase was characterized by down-regulation of CD127, Bcl-2, CCR7, and CD45RA and was followed by a substantial contraction resulting in a pool of memory T cells that re-expressed CD127, Bcl-2, and CD45RA. 3) These memory cells were polyfunctional in terms of degranulation and production of the cytokines IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, IL-2, and MIP-1beta. 4) The YF-17D-specific memory CD8(+) T cells had a phenotype (CCR7(-)CD45RA(+)) that is typically associated with terminally differentiated cells with limited proliferative capacity (T(EMRA)). However, these cells exhibited robust proliferative potential showing that expression of CD45RA may not always associate with terminal differentiation and, in fact, may be an indicator of highly functional memory CD8(+) T cells generated after acute viral infections.
PMCID:3374958
PMID: 19933869
ISSN: 1550-6606
CID: 3241882
Herpes simplex encephalitis during treatment with tumor necrosis factor-alpha inhibitors [Case Report]
Bradford, Russell D; Pettit, April C; Wright, Patty W; Mulligan, Mark J; Moreland, Larry W; McLain, David A; Gnann, John W; Bloch, Karen C
We report 3 cases of herpes simplex virus encephalitis in patients receiving tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) inhibitors for rheumatologic disorders. Although TNF-alpha inhibitors have been reported to increase the risk of other infectious diseases, to our knowledge, an association between anti-TNF-alpha drugs and herpes simplex virus encephalitis has not been previously described.
PMCID:3315107
PMID: 19681709
ISSN: 1537-6591
CID: 3241862
Advances in human clinical trials of vaccines to prevent HIV/AIDS and other HIV prevention interventions
Mulligan, Mark J
Nearly three decades after the first description in 1981 of the syndrome eventually designated as AIDS, only five efficacy trials testing just three HIV vaccine concepts have been initiated. In 2007, an efficacy analysis was conducted for the first of a newer generation of candidate HIV/AIDS vaccines based entirely on cellular immunity. Data from this study, known as the Step Study, indicated that the vaccine neither protected against infection nor lowered viral loads after infection. Furthermore, certain vaccinees were at higher risk of HIV infection following vaccination. This article explores these disappointing and surprising outcomes, reviews earlier efficacy studies and more recent discovery research, and provides a critical analysis of the field. Other HIV prevention interventions are considered because their successful implementation may dramatically alter the milieu for future HIV vaccine field trials, particularly impacting study designs and increasing sample sizes if incidence falls.
PMID: 19698284
ISSN: 1523-3847
CID: 3241872
The imperative of influenza vaccines for elderly individuals-an evolving story [Editorial]
Poland, Gregory A; Mulligan, Mark J
PMCID:2843138
PMID: 19508160
ISSN: 0022-1899
CID: 3241852
Molecular signature of human virus specific effector CD8+T cells [Meeting Abstract]
Akondy, Rama S.; Miller, Joseph D.; Doho, Gregory; Wu, Hong; Zilliox, Michael; de Rio, Carlos; Mulligan, Mark J.; Edupuganti, Srilatha; Haining, W. Nicholas; Ahmed, Rafi
ISI:000209763601204
ISSN: 0022-1767
CID: 3242462