A randomized first-in-human phase I trial of differentially adjuvanted Pfs48/45 malaria vaccines in Burkinabé adults

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A randomized first-in-human phase I trial of differentially adjuvanted Pfs48/45 malaria vaccines in Burkinabé adults. / Tiono, Alfred B; Plieskatt, Jordan L; Ouedraogo, Alphonse; Soulama, Ben Idriss; Miura, Kazutoyo; Bougouma, Edith C; Naghizadeh, Mohammad; Barry, Aissata; Yaro, Jean Baptist B; Ezinmegnon, Sem; Henry, Noelie; Ofori, Ebenezer Addo; Adu, Bright; Singh, Susheel K; Konkobo, Augustin; Lövgren Bengtsson, Karin; Diarra, Amidou; Carnrot, Cecilia; Reimer, Jenny M; Ouedraogo, Amidou; Tienta, Moussa; Long, Carole A; Ouedraogo, Issa N; Sagara, Issaka; Sirima, Sodiomon B; Theisen, Michael.

In: The Journal of Clinical Investigation, Vol. 134, No. 7, e175707, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Tiono, AB, Plieskatt, JL, Ouedraogo, A, Soulama, BI, Miura, K, Bougouma, EC, Naghizadeh, M, Barry, A, Yaro, JBB, Ezinmegnon, S, Henry, N, Ofori, EA, Adu, B, Singh, SK, Konkobo, A, Lövgren Bengtsson, K, Diarra, A, Carnrot, C, Reimer, JM, Ouedraogo, A, Tienta, M, Long, CA, Ouedraogo, IN, Sagara, I, Sirima, SB & Theisen, M 2024, 'A randomized first-in-human phase I trial of differentially adjuvanted Pfs48/45 malaria vaccines in Burkinabé adults', The Journal of Clinical Investigation, vol. 134, no. 7, e175707. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI175707

APA

Tiono, A. B., Plieskatt, J. L., Ouedraogo, A., Soulama, B. I., Miura, K., Bougouma, E. C., Naghizadeh, M., Barry, A., Yaro, J. B. B., Ezinmegnon, S., Henry, N., Ofori, E. A., Adu, B., Singh, S. K., Konkobo, A., Lövgren Bengtsson, K., Diarra, A., Carnrot, C., Reimer, J. M., ... Theisen, M. (2024). A randomized first-in-human phase I trial of differentially adjuvanted Pfs48/45 malaria vaccines in Burkinabé adults. The Journal of Clinical Investigation, 134(7), [e175707]. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI175707

Vancouver

Tiono AB, Plieskatt JL, Ouedraogo A, Soulama BI, Miura K, Bougouma EC et al. A randomized first-in-human phase I trial of differentially adjuvanted Pfs48/45 malaria vaccines in Burkinabé adults. The Journal of Clinical Investigation. 2024;134(7). e175707. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI175707

Author

Tiono, Alfred B ; Plieskatt, Jordan L ; Ouedraogo, Alphonse ; Soulama, Ben Idriss ; Miura, Kazutoyo ; Bougouma, Edith C ; Naghizadeh, Mohammad ; Barry, Aissata ; Yaro, Jean Baptist B ; Ezinmegnon, Sem ; Henry, Noelie ; Ofori, Ebenezer Addo ; Adu, Bright ; Singh, Susheel K ; Konkobo, Augustin ; Lövgren Bengtsson, Karin ; Diarra, Amidou ; Carnrot, Cecilia ; Reimer, Jenny M ; Ouedraogo, Amidou ; Tienta, Moussa ; Long, Carole A ; Ouedraogo, Issa N ; Sagara, Issaka ; Sirima, Sodiomon B ; Theisen, Michael. / A randomized first-in-human phase I trial of differentially adjuvanted Pfs48/45 malaria vaccines in Burkinabé adults. In: The Journal of Clinical Investigation. 2024 ; Vol. 134, No. 7.

Bibtex

@article{6a682362a1d24804b65fbdf924b27f38,
title = "A randomized first-in-human phase I trial of differentially adjuvanted Pfs48/45 malaria vaccines in Burkinab{\'e} adults",
abstract = "BACKGROUNDMalaria transmission-blocking vaccines aim to interrupt the transmission of malaria from one person to another.METHODSThe candidates R0.6C and ProC6C share the 6C domain of the Plasmodium falciparum sexual-stage antigen Pfs48/45. R0.6C utilizes the glutamate-rich protein (GLURP) as a carrier, and ProC6C includes a second domain (Pfs230-Pro) and a short 36-amino acid circumsporozoite protein (CSP) sequence. Healthy adults (n = 125) from a malaria-endemic area of Burkina Faso were immunized with 3 intramuscular injections, 4 weeks apart, of 30 μg or 100 μg R0.6C or ProC6C each adsorbed to Alhydrogel (AlOH) adjuvant alone or in combination with Matrix-M (15 μg or 50 μg, respectively). The allocation was random and double-blind for this phase I trial.RESULTSThe vaccines were safe and well tolerated with no vaccine-related serious adverse events. A total of 7 adverse events, mild to moderate in intensity and considered possibly related to the study vaccines, were recorded. Vaccine-specific antibodies were highest in volunteers immunized with 100 μg ProC6C-AlOH with Matrix-M, and 13 of 20 (65%) individuals in the group showed greater than 80% transmission-reducing activity (TRA) when evaluated in the standard membrane feeding assay at 15 mg/mL IgG. In contrast, R0.6C induced sporadic TRA.CONCLUSIONAll formulations were safe and well tolerated in a malaria-endemic area of Africa in healthy adults. The ProC6C-AlOH/Matrix-M vaccine elicited the highest levels of functional antibodies, meriting further investigation.TRIAL REGISTRATIONPan-African Clinical Trials Registry (https://pactr.samrc.ac.za) PACTR202201848463189.FUNDINGThe study was funded by the European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (grant RIA2018SV-2311).",
author = "Tiono, {Alfred B} and Plieskatt, {Jordan L} and Alphonse Ouedraogo and Soulama, {Ben Idriss} and Kazutoyo Miura and Bougouma, {Edith C} and Mohammad Naghizadeh and Aissata Barry and Yaro, {Jean Baptist B} and Sem Ezinmegnon and Noelie Henry and Ofori, {Ebenezer Addo} and Bright Adu and Singh, {Susheel K} and Augustin Konkobo and {L{\"o}vgren Bengtsson}, Karin and Amidou Diarra and Cecilia Carnrot and Reimer, {Jenny M} and Amidou Ouedraogo and Moussa Tienta and Long, {Carole A} and Ouedraogo, {Issa N} and Issaka Sagara and Sirima, {Sodiomon B} and Michael Theisen",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1172/JCI175707",
language = "English",
volume = "134",
journal = "Journal of Clinical Investigation",
issn = "0021-9738",
publisher = "American Society for Clinical Investigation",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A randomized first-in-human phase I trial of differentially adjuvanted Pfs48/45 malaria vaccines in Burkinabé adults

AU - Tiono, Alfred B

AU - Plieskatt, Jordan L

AU - Ouedraogo, Alphonse

AU - Soulama, Ben Idriss

AU - Miura, Kazutoyo

AU - Bougouma, Edith C

AU - Naghizadeh, Mohammad

AU - Barry, Aissata

AU - Yaro, Jean Baptist B

AU - Ezinmegnon, Sem

AU - Henry, Noelie

AU - Ofori, Ebenezer Addo

AU - Adu, Bright

AU - Singh, Susheel K

AU - Konkobo, Augustin

AU - Lövgren Bengtsson, Karin

AU - Diarra, Amidou

AU - Carnrot, Cecilia

AU - Reimer, Jenny M

AU - Ouedraogo, Amidou

AU - Tienta, Moussa

AU - Long, Carole A

AU - Ouedraogo, Issa N

AU - Sagara, Issaka

AU - Sirima, Sodiomon B

AU - Theisen, Michael

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - BACKGROUNDMalaria transmission-blocking vaccines aim to interrupt the transmission of malaria from one person to another.METHODSThe candidates R0.6C and ProC6C share the 6C domain of the Plasmodium falciparum sexual-stage antigen Pfs48/45. R0.6C utilizes the glutamate-rich protein (GLURP) as a carrier, and ProC6C includes a second domain (Pfs230-Pro) and a short 36-amino acid circumsporozoite protein (CSP) sequence. Healthy adults (n = 125) from a malaria-endemic area of Burkina Faso were immunized with 3 intramuscular injections, 4 weeks apart, of 30 μg or 100 μg R0.6C or ProC6C each adsorbed to Alhydrogel (AlOH) adjuvant alone or in combination with Matrix-M (15 μg or 50 μg, respectively). The allocation was random and double-blind for this phase I trial.RESULTSThe vaccines were safe and well tolerated with no vaccine-related serious adverse events. A total of 7 adverse events, mild to moderate in intensity and considered possibly related to the study vaccines, were recorded. Vaccine-specific antibodies were highest in volunteers immunized with 100 μg ProC6C-AlOH with Matrix-M, and 13 of 20 (65%) individuals in the group showed greater than 80% transmission-reducing activity (TRA) when evaluated in the standard membrane feeding assay at 15 mg/mL IgG. In contrast, R0.6C induced sporadic TRA.CONCLUSIONAll formulations were safe and well tolerated in a malaria-endemic area of Africa in healthy adults. The ProC6C-AlOH/Matrix-M vaccine elicited the highest levels of functional antibodies, meriting further investigation.TRIAL REGISTRATIONPan-African Clinical Trials Registry (https://pactr.samrc.ac.za) PACTR202201848463189.FUNDINGThe study was funded by the European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (grant RIA2018SV-2311).

AB - BACKGROUNDMalaria transmission-blocking vaccines aim to interrupt the transmission of malaria from one person to another.METHODSThe candidates R0.6C and ProC6C share the 6C domain of the Plasmodium falciparum sexual-stage antigen Pfs48/45. R0.6C utilizes the glutamate-rich protein (GLURP) as a carrier, and ProC6C includes a second domain (Pfs230-Pro) and a short 36-amino acid circumsporozoite protein (CSP) sequence. Healthy adults (n = 125) from a malaria-endemic area of Burkina Faso were immunized with 3 intramuscular injections, 4 weeks apart, of 30 μg or 100 μg R0.6C or ProC6C each adsorbed to Alhydrogel (AlOH) adjuvant alone or in combination with Matrix-M (15 μg or 50 μg, respectively). The allocation was random and double-blind for this phase I trial.RESULTSThe vaccines were safe and well tolerated with no vaccine-related serious adverse events. A total of 7 adverse events, mild to moderate in intensity and considered possibly related to the study vaccines, were recorded. Vaccine-specific antibodies were highest in volunteers immunized with 100 μg ProC6C-AlOH with Matrix-M, and 13 of 20 (65%) individuals in the group showed greater than 80% transmission-reducing activity (TRA) when evaluated in the standard membrane feeding assay at 15 mg/mL IgG. In contrast, R0.6C induced sporadic TRA.CONCLUSIONAll formulations were safe and well tolerated in a malaria-endemic area of Africa in healthy adults. The ProC6C-AlOH/Matrix-M vaccine elicited the highest levels of functional antibodies, meriting further investigation.TRIAL REGISTRATIONPan-African Clinical Trials Registry (https://pactr.samrc.ac.za) PACTR202201848463189.FUNDINGThe study was funded by the European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (grant RIA2018SV-2311).

U2 - 10.1172/JCI175707

DO - 10.1172/JCI175707

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38290009

VL - 134

JO - Journal of Clinical Investigation

JF - Journal of Clinical Investigation

SN - 0021-9738

IS - 7

M1 - e175707

ER -

ID: 387149322