Vaccine-enhanced respiratory syncytial virus disease in cotton rats following immunization with Lot 100 or a newly prepared reference vaccine

Author:

Prince Gregory A.1,Curtis Spencer J.1,Yim Kevin C.1,Porter David D.2

Affiliation:

1. Virion Systems, Inc., 9610 Medical Center Drive, Suite 100, Rockville, MD 20850-3343, USA1

2. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA2

Abstract

A formalin-inactivated respiratory syncytial virus vaccine was used to immunize infants in the mid-1960s; when these children later were naturally infected by the virus they developed markedly accentuated disease, and two died. For the present work, a new batch of vaccine was prepared using the original formula. Administration of either the old or new vaccines resulted in enhanced lesions in immunized cotton rats subsequently challenged with live virus, although administration of the vaccine reduced virus replication by 90%. Animals primed with formalin-inactivated virus and challenged developed markedly accentuated lesions of the same type as in animals undergoing primary or secondary infection. In addition, the animals with the vaccine-enhanced disease developed alveolitis and interstitial pneumonitis, which appear to be specific markers for the vaccine enhancement. The newly prepared vaccine appears suitable as a reference standard for studying the mechanism of vaccine-enhanced disease caused by this virus. Additionally, we reviewed the lesions in the lungs of the two humans who died with the vaccine-enhanced disease in 1967, and found that they were similar to, but more severe than those seen in the cotton rats.

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

Virology

Reference25 articles.

1. Pathological changes in virus infections of the lower respiratory tract in children;Aherne;Journal of Clinical Pathology,1970

2. Subcellular site of expression and route of vaccination influence pulmonary eosinophilia following respiratory syncytial virus challenge in BALB/c mice sensitized to the attachment G protein;Bembridge;Journal of Immunology,1998

3. Field evaluation of a respiratory syncytial virus vaccine and a trivalent parainfluenza virus vaccine in a pediatric population;Chin;American Journal of Epidemiology,1969

4. Pulmonary histopathology induced by respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) challenge of formalin-inactivated RSV-immunized BALB/c mice is abrogated by depletion of CD4+ T cells;Connors;Journal of Virology,1992

5. Altered reactivity to measles virus. Atypical measles in children previously immunized with inactivated measles virus vaccines;Fulginiti;Journal of the American Medical Association,1967

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