Abstract
Severe respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) lower respiratory tract illness (LRTI) in infants has proven challenging to prevent. In the last 50 years, conceptually different approaches failed to evolve into viable preventive alternatives for routine use. Inactivated RSV vaccine (that is, formalin-inactivated RSV) elicited severe LRTI in RSV-infected toddlers pre-immunized as infants; early purified F protein approaches in pregnant women failed to elicit sufficient immunity more than a decade ago; a second-generation monoclonal antibody (mAb) of high potency against the virus (that is, motavizumab) caused severe adverse reactions in the skin, and owing to lack of efficacy against RSV subgroup B, an extended half-life mAb targeting site V in the RSV fusion protein (that is, REG2222) did not meet its primary endpoint. In the meantime, two protein F vaccines failed to prevent medically attended LRTI in the elderly. However, palivizumab and the recent results of the Novavax maternal immunization trial with ResVax demonstrate that severe RSV LRTI can be prevented by mAb and by maternal immunization (at least to a certain extent). In fact, disease prevention may also decrease the rates of recurrent wheezing and all-cause pneumonia for at least 180 days. In this review, we discuss the history of RSV vaccine development, previous and current vaccine strategies undergoing evaluation, and recent information about disease burden and its implications for the effects of successful preventive strategies.
Funder
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Subject
General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
26 articles.
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