Published June 25, 2014 | Version v1
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Plasmodium vivax Sporozoite Challenge in Malaria-Naïve and Semi-Immune Colombian Volunteers

Description

Significant progress has been recently achieved in the development of Plasmodium vivax challenge infections in humans, which are essential for vaccine and drug testing. With the goal of accelerating clinical development of malaria vaccines, the outcome of infections experimentally induced in naïve and semi-immune volunteers by infected mosquito bites was compared.Seven malaria-naïve and nine semi-immune Colombian adults (n = 16) were subjected to the bites of 2-4 P. vivax sporozoite-infected Anopheles mosquitoes. Parasitemia levels, malaria clinical manifestations, and immune responses were assessed and compared.All volunteers developed infections as confirmed by microscopy and RT-qPCR. No significant difference in the pre-patent period (mean 12.5 and 12.8 days for malaria-naïve and malaria-exposed, respectively) was observed but naïve volunteers developed classical malaria signs and symptoms, while semi-immune volunteers displayed minor or no symptoms at the day of diagnosis. A malaria-naïve volunteer developed a transient low submicroscopic parasitemia that cured spontaneously. Infection induced an increase in specific antibody levels in both groups.Sporozoite infectious challenge was safe and reproducible in semi-immune and naïve volunteers. This model will provide information for simultaneous comparison of the protective efficacy of P. vivax vaccines in naïve and semi-immune volunteers under controlled conditions and would accelerate P. vivax vaccine development.clinicaltrials.gov NCT01585077.

⚠️ This is an automatic machine translation with an accuracy of 90-95%

Translated Description (Arabic)

تم إحراز تقدم كبير مؤخرًا في تطوير عدوى تحدي المتصورة النشيطة لدى البشر، وهي ضرورية لاختبار اللقاحات والأدوية. وبهدف تسريع التطور السريري للقاحات الملاريا، تمت مقارنة نتائج العدوى التي يسببها تجريبيا المتطوعون الساذجون وشبه المناعيون عن طريق لدغات البعوض المصابة. تعرض سبعة من البالغين الكولومبيين الساذجين وتسعة من البالغين الكولومبيين شبه المناعيين (العدد = 16) لدغات بعوض الأنوفيليس 2-4 P. vivax sporozoite. تم تقييم ومقارنة مستويات الطفيليات والمظاهر السريرية للملاريا والاستجابات المناعية. أصيب جميع المتطوعين بالعدوى كما أكد الفحص المجهري و RT - qPCR. لم يلاحظ أي فرق كبير في فترة ما قبل براءة الاختراع (متوسط 12.5 و 12.8 يومًا للملاريا الساذجة والمعرضة للملاريا، على التوالي)، لكن المتطوعين الساذجين أصيبوا بعلامات وأعراض الملاريا الكلاسيكية، في حين أظهر المتطوعون شبه المناعيون أعراضًا طفيفة أو لم تظهر أي أعراض في يوم التشخيص. طور متطوع ساذج مصاب بالملاريا طفيلًا طفيليًا عابرًا منخفضًا تحت المجهر تم علاجه تلقائيًا. أدت العدوى إلى زيادة في مستويات الأجسام المضادة المحددة في كلتا المجموعتين. كان التحدي المعدي للحيوانات البوغية آمنًا وقابلًا للتكاثر لدى المتطوعين شبه المناعيين والساذجين. سيوفر هذا النموذج معلومات للمقارنة المتزامنة للفعالية الوقائية للقاحات P. vivax في المتطوعين الساذجين وشبه المناعيين في ظل ظروف خاضعة للرقابة ومن شأنه تسريع تطوير لقاح P. vivax.clinicaltrials.gov NCT01585077.

Translated Description (English)

Significant progress has recently been achieved in the development of Plasmodium vivax challenge infections in humans, which are essential for vaccine and drug testing. With the goal of accelerating clinical development of malaria vaccines, the outcome of infections experimentally induced in naïve and semi-immune volunteers by infected mosquito bites was compared. Seven malaria-naïve and nine semi-immune Colombian adults (n = 16) were subjected to the bites of 2-4 P. vivax sporozoite-infected Anopheles mosquitoes. Parasitemia levels, malaria clinical manifestations, and immune responses were assessed and compared.All volunteers developed infections as confirmed by microscopy and RT-qPCR. No significant difference in the pre-patent period (mean 12.5 and 12.8 days for malaria-naïve and malaria-exposed, respectively) was observed but naïve volunteers developed classical malaria signs and symptoms, while semi-immune volunteers displayed minor or no symptoms at the day of diagnosis. A malaria-naïve volunteer developed a transient low submicroscopic parasitemia that cured spontaneously. Infection induced an increase in specific antibody levels in both groups. Sporozoite infectious challenge was safe and reproducible in semi-immune and naïve volunteers. This model will provide information for simultaneous comparison of the protective efficacy of P. vivax vaccines in naïve and semi-immune volunteers under controlled conditions and would accelerate P. vivax vaccine development.clinicaltrials.gov NCT01585077.

Translated Description (French)

Significant progress has been recently achieved in the development of Plasmodium vivax challenge infections in humans, which are essential for vaccine and drug testing. With the goal of accelerating clinical development of malaria vaccines, the outcome of infections experimentally induced in naïve and semi-immune volunteers by infected mosquito bites was compared.Seven malaria-naïve and nine semi-immune Colombian adults (n = 16) were subjected to the bites of 2-4 P. vivax sporozoite-infected Anopheles mosquitoes. Parasitemia levels, malaria clinical manifestations, and immune responses were assessed and compared.All volunteers developed infections as confirmed by microscopy and RT-qPCR. Non significant difference in the pre-patent period (mean 12.5 and 12.8 days for malaria-naïve and malaria-exposed, respectively) was observd but naïve volunteers developed classical malaria signs and symptoms, while semi-immune volunteers displayed minor or no symptoms at the day of diagnosis. A malaria-naïve volunteer developed a transient low submicroscopic parasitemia that cured spontaneously. Infection induite par une augmentation des niveaux spécifiques d'antibody in both groups.Sporozoite infectious challenge was safe and reproduccible in semiimmune and naïve volunteers. This model will provide information for simultaneous comparison of the protective efficacy of P. vivax vaccines in naïve and semi-immune volunteers under controlled conditions and would accelerate P. vivax vaccine development.clinicaltrials.gov NCT01585077.

Translated Description (Spanish)

Significant progress has been recently achieved in the development of Plasmodium vivax challenge infections in humans, which are essential for vaccine and drug testing. With the goal of accelerating clinical development of malaria vaccines, the outcome of infections experimentally induced in naïve and semi-inmune volunteers by infected mosquito bites was compared.Seven malaria-naïve and nine semi-inmune Colombian adults (n = 16) were subjected to the bites of 2-4 P. vivax sporozoite-infected Anopheles mosquitoes. Parasitemia levels, malaria clinical manifestations, and immune responses were assessed and compared.All volunteers developed infections as confirmed by microscopy and RT-qPCR. No significant difference in the pre-patent period (mean 12.5 and 12.8 days for malaria-naïve and malaria-exposed, respectively) was observed but naïve volunteers developed classical malaria signs and symptoms, while semi-immune volunteers displayed minor or no symptoms at the day of diagnosis. A malaria-naïve volunteer developed a transient low submicroscopic parasitemia that cured spontaneously. Infection induced an increase in specific antibody levels in both groups.Sporozoite infectious challenge was safe and reproducible in semi-immune and naïve volunteers. This model will provide information for simultaneous comparison of the protective effectivity of P. vivax vaccines in naïve and semi-immune volunteers under controlled conditions and would accelerate P. vivax vaccine development.clinicaltrials.gov NCT01585077.

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Additional details

Additional titles

Translated title (Arabic)
تحدي المتصورة النشيطة للحيوانات البوغية في المتطوعين الكولومبيين الساذجين وشبه المناعين للملاريا
Translated title (English)
Plasmodium vivax Sporozoite Challenge in Malaria-Naïve and Semi-Immune Colombian Volunteers
Translated title (French)
Plasmodium vivax Sporozoite Challenge in Malaria-Naïve and Semi-Immune Colombian Volunteers
Translated title (Spanish)
Plasmodium vivax Sporozoite Challenge in Malaria-Naïve and Semi-Immune Colombian Volunteers

Identifiers

Other
https://openalex.org/W2072563376
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0099754

GreSIS Basics Section

Is Global South Knowledge
Yes
Country
Colombia

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