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Sporozoite immunization: Innovative Translational Science to Support the Fight against malaria

Authors :
Thomas L. Richie
L.W. Preston Church
Tooba Murshedkar
Peter F. Billingsley
Eric R. James
Mei-Chun Chen
Yonas Abebe
Natasha KC
Sumana Chakravarty
David Dolberg
Sara A. Healy
Halimatou Diawara
Mahamadou S. Sissoko
Issaka Sagara
David M. Cook
Judith E. Epstein
Benjamin Mordmüller
Melissa Kapulu
Andrea Kreidenweiss
Blandine Franke-Fayard
Selidji T. Agnandji
María-Silvia A. López Mikue
Matthew B.B. McCall
Laura Steinhardt
Martina Oneko
Ally Olotu
Ashley M. Vaughan
James G. Kublin
Sean C. Murphy
Said Jongo
Marcel Tanner
Sodiomon B. Sirima
Matthew B. Laurens
Claudia Daubenberger
Joana C. Silva
Kirsten E. Lyke
Chris J. Janse
Meta Roestenberg
Robert W. Sauerwein
Salim Abdulla
Alassane Dicko
Stefan H. I. Kappe
B. Kim Lee Sim
Patrick E. Duffy
Peter G. Kremsner
Stephen L. Hoffman
Source :
Expert Review of Vaccines, Vol 0, Iss 0 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Taylor & Francis Group, 2023.

Abstract

Introduction Malaria, a devastating febrile illness caused by protozoan parasites, sickened 247,000,000 people in 2021 and killed 619,000, mostly children and pregnant women in sub-Saharan Africa. A highly effective vaccine is urgently needed, especially for Plasmodium falciparum (Pf), the deadliest human malaria parasite. Areas covered Sporozoites (SPZ), the parasite stage transmitted by Anopheles mosquitoes to humans, are the only vaccine immunogen achieving > 90% efficacy against Pf infection. This review describes > 30 clinical trials of PfSPZ vaccines in the U.S.A., Europe, Africa, and Asia, based on first-hand knowledge of the trials and PubMed searches of ‘sporozoites,’ ‘malaria,’ and ‘vaccines.’ Expert opinion First generation (radiation-attenuated) PfSPZ vaccines are safe, well tolerated, 80-100% efficacious against homologous controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) and provide 18-19 months protection without boosting in Africa. Second generation chemo-attenuated PfSPZ are more potent, 100% efficacious against stringent heterologous (variant strain) CHMI, but require a co-administered drug, raising safety concerns. Third generation, late liver stage-arresting, replication competent (LARC), genetically-attenuated PfSPZ are expected to be both safe and highly efficacious. Overall, PfSPZ vaccines meet safety, tolerability, and efficacy requirements for protecting pregnant women and travelers, with licensure for these populations possible within five years. Protecting children and mass vaccination programs to block transmission and eliminate malaria are long-term objectives.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14760584 and 17448395
Issue :
0
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Expert Review of Vaccines
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.64ccc130995e4fbda0570808ef7ca47d
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/14760584.2023.2245890