Safety and Immunogenicity of Oral Inactivated Whole-Cell Helicobacter pylori Vaccine with Adjuvant among Volunteers with or without Subclinical Infection

Author:

Kotloff Karen L.12,Sztein Marcelo B.12,Wasserman Steven S.2,Losonsky Genevieve A.12,DiLorenzo Susan C.1,Walker Richard I.3

Affiliation:

1. Division of Infectious Disease and Tropical Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics,1 and

2. Division of Geographic Medicine, Department of Medicine,2

3. Center for Vaccine Development, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, and Antex Biologics, Inc., Gaithersburg,3Maryland

Abstract

ABSTRACT Helicobacter pylori infection of the gastric mucosa can be found in approximately 50% of the world's population and is associated with a range of pathology, including peptic ulcer, atrophic gastritis, and gastric cancer. To explore immunization as a strategy for preventing and treating H. pylori -associated disease, we assessed the safety and immunogenicity in healthy adults of a formalin-inactivated, oral H. pylori whole-cell (HWC) vaccine, administered with or without mutant Escherichia coli heat-labile toxin (LT R192G ) as a mucosal adjuvant. In a dose-response study, 23 subjects with or without H. pylori infection were vaccinated with either 2.5 × 10 6 HWC, 2.5 × 10 8 HWC, or 2.5 × 10 10 HWC, plus 25 μg of LT R192G . Thereafter, a randomized study was conducted in which 18 H. pylori -infected subjects were assigned, in a double-blind fashion, to receive either 2.5 × 10 10 HWC plus placebo-adjuvant, placebo-vaccine plus 25 μg of LT R192G , placebo-vaccine plus placebo-adjuvant, or 2.5 × 10 10 HWC plus 25 μg of LT R192G . Diarrhea (six subjects), low-grade fever (five subjects), and vomiting (two subjects) were observed, usually after the first dose. Significant rises in geometric mean mucosal (fecal and salivary) anti-HWC immunoglobulin A antibodies occurred among H. pylori -infected and uninfected subjects following inoculation with 2.5 × 10 10 HWC plus 25 μg of LT R192G . Moreover, among H. pylori -negative volunteers, this regimen induced significant lymphoproliferative responses in 5 of 10 subjects and gamma interferon production responses to H. pylori sonicate in 7 of 10 subjects. There was no evidence that vaccination eradicated H. pylori in infected volunteers. These results suggest that it is possible to stimulate mucosal and systemic immune responses in humans to H. pylori antigens by using an HWC vaccine.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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