Safety and Immunogenicity of an Enterotoxigenic
Escherichia coli
Vaccine Patch Containing Heat-Labile Toxin: Use of Skin Pretreatment To Disrupt the Stratum Corneum
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Published:2007-05
Issue:5
Volume:75
Page:2163-2170
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ISSN:0019-9567
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Container-title:Infection and Immunity
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Infect Immun
Author:
Glenn Gregory M.12, Villar Christina P.1, Flyer David C.1, Bourgeois A. Louis2, McKenzie Robin2, Lavker Robert M.3, Frech Sarah A.1
Affiliation:
1. IOMAI Corporation, 20 Firstfield Road, Gaithersburg, Maryland 20878 2. Center for Immunization Research, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, 624 North Broadway, Baltimore, Maryland 21205 3. Northwestern University School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, 303 East Chicago Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60611
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Transcutaneous immunization allows safe delivery of native heat-labile enterotoxin (LT) from
Escherichia coli
via application of a simple patch. Physical disruption of the stratum corneum can improve the efficiency of delivery. In the current study, the stratum corneum was disrupted using an electrocardiogram prep pad prior to patch application. The effects were quantified using transepidermal water loss (TEWL) and were correlated with the immune responses. Sixty adults received 50 μg of LT from three lots of LT (20 adults per group) administered in a patch on days 0 and 21. The immunizations were well tolerated. There were no differences in the anti-LT immunoglobulin G (IgG) titers between the three LT lots; the seroconversion rate was 100%, and the mean anti-LT IgG titer was 12,185 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay units (EU) (a 24-fold increase). TEWL measurements obtained at the time of the second immunization were found to correlate with the day 42 individual increases in the anti-LT IgG titer (
r
= 0.59,
P
< 0.001). In a comparative assessment of the immune responses, sera after an LT
+
ST
+
(E2447A) oral ETEC challenge, which induced moderate to severe diarrhea in 81% of the recipients, had anti-LT IgG titers of 3,245 EU (a 10.8-fold increase). Similarly, the anti-LT IgG titer after administration of an oral cholera toxin B subunit-containing cholera vaccine, which cross-reacts with LT and protects against LT and LT/heat-stable toxin ETEC disease in the field, was 6,741 EU (a 3.3-fold increase). This study confirmed that a well-tolerated regimen for stratum corneum disruption before vaccine patch application results in robust immunity comparable to natural immunity and vaccine-induced immunity and that the magnitude of stratum corneum disruption correlates with the immune response.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
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