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  • Tuberculosis Vaccines Information

    he Lancet Infectious Diseases 2006; 6:522-528 DOI:10.1016/S1473-3099(06)70552-7
    Early clinical trials with a new tuberculosis vaccine, MVA85A, in tuberculosis-endemic countries: issues in study design

    Hannah B IbangaFWACP a, Roger H BrookesPhD a, Philip C HillFRACP a, Patrick K OwiafeHND a, Helen A FletcherPhD c, Christian LienhardtMD b, Adrian VS HillFMedSci c, Richard A AdegbolaFRCPath a and Dr Helen McShaneMRCP c

    Summary
    Introduction
    New vaccine development
    Tuberculosis specific issues
    HIV infection: prevalence and acceptability of testing within a clinical trial
    Trial awareness and recruitment
    Ethical issues
    Results of screening and reasons for exclusion
    Conclusions
    Search strategy and selection criteria
    References

    Summary

    Tuberculosis remains a substantial global health problem despite effective drug treatments. The efficacy of BCG, the only available vaccine, is variable, especially in tuberculosis-endemic regions. Recent advances in the development of new vaccines against tuberculosis mean that the first of these are now entering into early clinical trials. A recombinant modified vaccinia virus Ankara expressing a major secreted antigen from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, antigen 85A, was the first new tuberculosis vaccine to enter into clinical trials in September 2002. This vaccine is known as MVA85A. In a series of phase I clinical trials in the UK, MVA85A had an excellent safety profile and was highly immunogenic. MVA85A was subsequently evaluated in a series of phase I trials in The Gambia, a tuberculosis-endemic area in west Africa. This vaccine is the only new subunit tuberculosis vaccine to enter into clinical trials in Africa to date. Here, we discuss some of the issues that were considered in the protocol design of these studies including recruitment, inclusion and exclusion criteria, reimbursement of study participants, and HIV testing. These issues are highly relevant to early clinical trials with all new tuberculosis vaccines in the developing world.
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    Introduction

    In 1993, WHO declared the current tuberculosis epidemic ?a global emergency?.1 More recently, in August 2005, WHO has again declared the tuberculosis epidemic in Africa an emergency situation.2 Worldwide, there are 8 million new cases and 2 million deaths each year from this disease.3 98% of these deaths occur in the developing world and countries of the former Soviet Union. The global prevalence of latent Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection is estimated to be 32% (1?86 billion people).3 Such individuals are at risk of reactivation of this latent infection should they become immunosuppressed for any reason. Globally, coinfection with HIV is the most important risk factor for progression of latent M tuberculosis infection to tuberculosis disease and the current HIV pandemic has fuelled the tuberculosis epidemic. The emergence of multidrug-resistant strains of M tuberculosis has further compounded the problem and made the need to control this disease even more urgent.
    The best way to control the tuberculosis epidemic would be with an effective vaccine. BCG, the only available vaccine against M tuberculosis, is a live attenuated strain of Mycobacterium bovis that was first used in 1921.4 Since then it has become a well established part of the WHO Expanded Programme on Immunisation and is widely administered at birth throughout the developing world. When administered at birth it confers consistent and appreciable protection against disseminated disease, including tuberculous meningitis.5 However, adult pulmonary disease is responsible for the huge global public-health burden. The protection imparted by BCG against pulmonary disease has been evaluated in a number of large randomised controlled trials and observational studies, and has been shown to vary greatly, from 0 to 80%.4,6 Furthermore, a recent large cluster randomised trial estimating the effect of BCG revaccination in Brazilian school children who had been vaccinated with BCG at birth demonstrated that BCG revaccination did not confer any additional protection and should therefore not be recommended.7
    There are several explanations for the variable efficacy in protection against pulmonary disease conferred by BCG. The one best supported by the available data is that exposure to environmental mycobacteria?eg, Mycobacterium avium, Mycobacterium marinum, and Mycobacterium intracellulare?interferes with BCG ?take?. There are two possible mechanisms for this interference: masking and boosting. First, exposure to environmental mycobacteria induces an antimycobacterial immune response, and subsequent vaccination with BCG does not increase or boost that response. Evidence of such masking comes from a series of studies done in parallel in adolescent school children in the UK and in Malawi.8 In the UK, baseline cellular immunity to mycobacterial antigens was low, and was increased after BCG vaccination. By contrast, in Malawi, the baseline cellular immune response to mycobacterial antigens was high and BCG vaccination did not result in a substantial incremental rise in these responses. The second possible mechanism for environmental mycobacterial interference is that antimycobacterial immunity induced by environmental mycobacteria abrogates the replication of BCG and subsequent induction of an immune response. This blocking hypothesis is supported by data from murine experiments.9 Importantly in this murine study, the protective efficacy of the subunit vaccines tested was not abrogated by prior exposure to environmental mycobacteria.
    A second explanation for the variable efficacy of BCG is the age at administration. Trials done in young, mycobacteria-naive children have been generally positive. Other possible explanations for the variability in BCG efficacy across different trials include differences between BCG strains, host genetics, and nutritional factors.10?12 Several of these factors might contribute to the variability seen.
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    New vaccine development

    There is an urgent need for a better vaccination strategy. Since BCG does confer substantial protection against disseminated disease in childhood, ideally any new vaccination strategy should include BCG to retain this protective effect. Over the past decade there has been a resurgence of interest in the development of new tuberculosis vaccines and some of the most promising of these are now entering into early clinical trials.
    M tuberculosis is an intracellular pathogen and protective immunity is entirely dependent on an intact cellular immune response.13 A Th1 type CD4 T-cell response is essential for protective immunity, and MHC class I restricted CD8+ T cells might also be required. Although a validated correlate of protection has not yet been identified, the secretion of interferon γ from antigen-specific T cells is essential for the protective immune response to this pathogen.14,15
    There are two main strategies for developing an improved tuberculosis vaccine. The first is to develop a subunit vaccine (DNA, recombinant viral vector, or recombinant protein) expressing an immunodominant antigen(s) from M tuberculosis. Such vaccines are largely being developed to boost BCG rather than replace it. The second approach is to use the whole organism, either by developing a recombinant strain of BCG or by developing an attenuated strain of M tuberculosis. This strategy aims to replace BCG. Any candidate tuberculosis vaccine is evaluated in a series of animal models, and the most promising candidates are then considered for evaluation in early clinical trials. To date, only four such candidates have entered into clinical trials. The first, a recombinant modified vaccinia virus Ankara expressing antigen 85A known as MVA85A, entered into clinical trials in the UK in September 2002.16 Phase I studies have demonstrated that MVA85A is safe and induces high levels of cellular immunity when used to vaccinate BCG-naive adults. When used in BCG-primed adults, significantly higher levels of cellular immunity are induced, which persist for longer (p=0?015).17 In May 2003, when sufficient safety data was obtained from the UK studies, MVA85A entered into phase I clinical trials in The Gambia (figure 1). MVA85A is currently in phase II clinical trials in the Western Cape in South Africa.


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    Figure 1. Members of the MRC Gambia vaccine trial team celebrate with the first person in Africa to be vaccinated with MVA85A at the end of his follow-up


    The second vaccine to enter into clinical trials was a recombinant strain of BCG over-expressing antigen 85B, rBCG30.18 This vaccine entered into clinical trials in the USA in early 2004.19 The third vaccine that has entered into clinical trials is a recombinant fusion protein comprising the 32 and 39 kDa proteins from M tuberculosis, M tuberculosis 72F, used in conjunction with an adjuvant (AS02).20 This vaccine also entered into clinical trials in the USA in early 2004.21 In November 2005, a fusion protein expressing ESAT6 and antigen 85b entered into phase I studies in Europe.22 In addition to these four vaccines, there is an ongoing phase III efficacy trial of an inactivated whole-cell mycobacterial vaccine in HIV-infected individuals in Tanzania.23
    Here, we discuss the issues that arose in the design, setting up, and implementation of the clinical trials with MVA85A in The Gambia.
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    Tuberculosis specific issues

    The Koch reaction

    The Koch reaction describes the development of immunopathology in a person or animal with tuberculosis when an exaggerated immune response to M tuberculosis is stimulated.24 Such pathology occurs both at the site of infection and at the site of vaccination. In 1891, Koch observed that 4?6 weeks after the establishment of M tuberculosis infection in guineapigs, intradermal challenge with either the whole organism or culture filtrate resulted in necrosis and subsequent healing of the injection site and similar lesions in the original tuberculous lesion.25 In human beings, Koch found that injection of larger quantities of culture filtrate subcutaneously into tuberculosis patients evoked necrosis in established tuberculous lesions at distant sites, with disastrous results in the spine and lungs.
    As the first new candidate tuberculosis vaccines enter into clinical trials, there is a concern that highly immunogenic vaccines could induce such a reaction. The available animal data suggest that such reactions correlate with bacterial load and are unlikely to occur in animals or human beings with latent infection, where the bacterial load is low.26 To minimise the risk of a Koch reaction occurring, we began the clinical trials with MVA85A in individuals with minimal pre-existing mycobacterial immunity.

    The evaluation of pre-existing antimycobacterial immunity

    For any new tuberculosis vaccine entering into clinical trials, it is necessary to determine the degree of pre-existing mycobacterial infection in individuals at screening. This assessment allows early trials to be done in individuals with minimal pre-existing exposure, and thus minimise the risks of inducing a Koch reaction. The clinical studies with MVA85A in the UK and in The Gambia were designed to allow for vaccination of patient groups sequentially with a step-wise increase in mycobacterial exposure to minimise this risk.16 In addition, studies were done sequentially in the UK and then in The Gambia, where exposure to both environmental mycobacteria and M tuberculosis is higher.27,28 In these studies, we used a combination of tuberculin skin testing, together with measurement of cellular immune responses using an ex-vivo interferon γ Elispot assay, to determine the pre-existing antimycobacterial immunity.
    Tuberculin skin test

    The tuberculin skin test is the standard test used throughout the world to determine the level of antimycobacterial immunity, and therefore mycobacterial infection. This test was first used in 1890, and is the oldest diagnostic test in clinical use.29 It involves an intradermal injection with tuberculin purified protein derivative (PPD). The size of the delayed-type hypersensitivity response is measured 2?3 days later. The biggest limitation of the tuberculin skin test is that PPD lacks specificity for M tuberculosis infection because many of the proteins present have homologues in a number of non-tuberculous mycobacteria. A positive tuberculin skin test response?ie, a Mantoux response of greater than 15 mm in an individual who has been BCG vaccinated, or greater than 10 mm in someone without BCG vaccination?can therefore result from infection with M tuberculosis, prior vaccination with BCG, or exposure to environmental mycobacteria.30,31 A further limitation of the tuberculin skin test is that it can lack sensitivity?eg, in immunosuppressed individuals.32 Despite these limitations, the tuberculin skin test remains a commonly used test in determining infection with M tuberculosis throughout the world.33

    In-vitro T-cell assays: the ex-vivo interferon γ Elispot assay

    In-vitro assays of cellular immunological function are increasingly being used in parallel with the tuberculin skin test to obtain greater sensitivity and specificity with respect to the level of pre-existing immunity to mycobacteria. These assays are based on the measurement of the secretion of interferon γ after stimulation with mycobacterial antigens.34 In the clinical studies with MVA85A, the ex-vivo interferon γ Elispot assay was used as the main cellular immunological assay.
    In these early vaccine studies, we were interested in quantifying Elispot responses to both PPD and two M tuberculosis-specific antigens, ESAT6 and CFP10. The responses to these two antigens allowed the diagnosis and exclusion of individuals who were latently infected with M tuberculosis.35 ESAT6 and CFP10 are highly immunogenic and are among the early secreted antigens in M tuberculosis infection. Their genes are not present in any strain of BCG and homologues of these genes are absent from a number of relevant non-tuberculous mycobacteria.36?38 Individuals with active tuberculosis were excluded on the basis of clinical history, ESAT6 and CFP10 Elispot response, and chest radiograph findings. Furthermore, to identify individuals who were as mycobacterially naive as possible for these early studies, we set a relatively low threshold for the upper limit to the PPD Elispot response at screening. Individuals with a PPD response greater than 100 spot forming cells per million peripheral blood mononuclear cells were excluded from the study.
    Elispot is one of the most sensitive cellular immunological assays available.39 The assay does not require expensive equipment, requires relatively low technology, and has been used in larger scale epidemiological studies and therefore has a potential role in larger scale vaccine studies.40 For these reasons, in the clinical studies with MVA85A, the ex-vivo interferon γ Elispot assay was used as the main cellular immunological assay. The assay was done at screening to determine pre-existing antimycobacterial immunity and repeated after vaccination to monitor vaccine-induced changes in immune responses.
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    Recruitment of BCG-naive subjects: reliability of BCG scar detection

    In the first clinical trial with MVA85A in The Gambia, the aim was to recruit individuals who had not been BCG vaccinated and who had minimal pre-existing mycobacterial exposure. BCG-vaccinated individuals were subsequently recruited once the safety of MVA85A had been demonstrated in BCG-naive individuals. BCG was not widely used in The Gambia until 1985. The most reliable method to determine if a person has been vaccinated with BCG is to examine the infant welfare card where vaccinations given in infancy are documented or the mothers are asked about this vaccination. In the absence of such source data, we had to rely on the presence or absence of a scar. Absence of scar is an imperfect indicator of whether or not someone has received BCG vaccination. In the UK, it has been reported that about 26% of individuals may not produce a scar 2 years after BCG vaccination.41 A study in Malawi showed that BCG scar was a highly sensitive indicator of vaccination status when vaccine was properly handled and given at over 3 months of age, but in infants under 1 month of age vaccinated in health centres, sensitivity of BCG scar had declined to under 80% by 4 years post-vaccination.42 Despite these limitations, presence of a BCG scar was an exclusion criterion in the BCG-naive study.
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    HIV infection: prevalence and acceptability of testing within a clinical trial

    In The Gambia, the prevalence of HIV-1 infection is 1?0%, and the prevalence of HIV-2 infection is 0?8%.43 There is a high level of public awareness about HIV infection and people are encouraged to come for voluntary counselling and testing. However, the stigma surrounding HIV is still high. Full pretest and post-test counselling was provided for all of the individuals screened for this study. Individuals were informed that they would be tested for HIV, but had the option of not being told what the result was. In a Zambian study in which 475 people were HIV screened, 41 (8?6%) people did not come back for their results,44 including six people who did not want to know the results, and others who gave reasons such as distance from the centre, death, or illness.
    In total, 228 people were screened for the MVA85A vaccine trials, and there were no positive HIV results, indicating the low HIV prevalence in this population. If any individuals had tested positive for infection with HIV, they would have been referred to the local genitourinary medicine clinic within the Medical Research Council (MRC) unit, where they would be provided with ongoing medical care and considered for free antiretroviral therapy. In the studies with MVA85A, none of the study participants objected to having an HIV test, after suitable counselling. This study demonstrates the acceptability of HIV testing in this study population, although this may be different elsewhere.
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    Trial awareness and recruitment

    Before the study started, officers in the government Departments of State for Health and Social Welfare were informed about the trials. Meetings with community and religious leaders followed these visits to sensitise the community about the trial. In conjunction, there was a media campaign educating the population on tuberculosis. The media campaign included radio and television programmes in the major local languages and English. These programmes were both live phone-in and educational programmes. Media releases were done in the major newspapers. Additionally, the study team distributed T-shirts and caps printed with calls for people to be involved in the tuberculosis vaccine trial.
    At the mosques or institutions visited, the people present were encouraged to visit the MRC and obtain more information on the trial. Others responded to the media campaign by either making phone calls or coming to the MRC unit. At the MRC unit, more detailed information was given on the trial. Information sheets, in English, were translated verbally into the relevant local language (Wolof or Mandinka).
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    Ethical issues

    Consent

    Informed consent is an essential component of any research involving human patients. This consent must be from the individual taking part in the research, but could also involve the family or community in which that individual lives. In The Gambia, the family and community might be involved in the decision to participate, as well as the individual. Community awareness meetings conducted in the mosques and educational institutions enabled discussion of the rationale and study requirements with the community and religious leaders. Leaders who gave consent to the trial then called a meeting of their community and the study staff explained the study in detail to the community. Without the participation and consent of the leaders, it would have been difficult to reach the individuals within these communities.
    After information was given to the interested individuals, many consulted with their families on whether or not to participate. Some interested volunteers had to withdraw their consent because of refusal of their families to allow them to participate in the trial. Two of the 21 volunteers who agreed to participate asked that their families would not be made aware of their participation in the study.
    Potential volunteers were all given written information about the background to the study, numbers of individuals vaccinated in the UK, expected side-effects, and potential risks to taking part.
    Written, informed consent was obtained from all individuals at screening. The results of the screening blood tests were given to all volunteers and eligible participants were given a date for enrolment. All the volunteers were given copies of their laboratory results. All the research participants who were vaccinated had certificates given to them in a public ceremony such as the World TB Day 2004 or ceremonies at the MRC unit.

    Reimbursement

    Reimbursement of study participants is a difficult ethical issue in any research involving human beings, but is perhaps more so in the developing world where the potential for undue coercion is greatest. It is generally agreed that study participants should be paid or compensated as long as the inducement is not ?undue?. The National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research report45 defined undue inducement as an excessive, unwarranted, inappropriate, or improper reward or other overture to obtain compliance. This report acknowledges that what might be acceptable in one setting could be considered undue influence in some vulnerable populations. The National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects states that ?limiting remuneration to payment for time and inconveniences of participation and compensation for any injury resulting from participation is the best way to keep inducements due?. It has recently been suggested that, providing the research is ethical and presents a favourable risk-benefit ratio, there is no need to worry about undue coercion.46
    In the UK studies with MVA85A, participants were compensated for their time at an hourly rate that was equivalent to the minimum wage. In addition, participants were compensated for their travelling expenses. In The Gambia, participants were reimbursed for their travel expenses and provided with a meal. The total amount reimbursed in The Gambia was approximately ?10 for nine visits over the course of the study period (6 months). The minimum wage in The Gambia is approximately ?7?9 per month. Furthermore, participants were eligible for free medical treatment at the MRC clinic (figure 2). In The Gambia, medical treatment is relatively expensive and so the provision of this facility is considered to be of great benefit to the volunteers, who might not otherwise be able to afford it.


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    Figure 2. A routine clinic at the MRC laboratories, Fajara


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    Results of screening and reasons for exclusion

    228 volunteers were screened for eligibility for the studies. The panel shows the general inclusion and exclusion criteria for the trials. 23 (10%) of these individuals were eligible to participate and 21 eventually did so. Table 1 shows the reasons for exclusion, and table 2 shows the number of individuals excluded for one or more of these reasons. 11 people were vaccinated in the ?mycobacterially and BCG naive? group and ten were vaccinated in the ?BCG vaccinated? group.
    Panel: General inclusion and exclusion criteria for the MVA85A vaccine studiesInclusion criteria

    ?Healthy adult male aged 18?45 years

    ?Normal medical history and physical examination

    ?Normal haematological and biochemical indices, negative HIV antibody test, and no serological evidence of HBV infection

    ?Normal chest radiograph


    Exclusion criteria

    ?Positive Elispot response to ESAT6 or CFP10

    ?PPD Elispot greater than 100 spots per million peripheral blood mononuclear cells on ex-vivo Elispot assay

    ?BCG scar (for the first study only)

    ?Certain clinical conditions?eg, skin disorders (eczema, psoriasis, etc), allergy, immunodeficiency, cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease, endocrine disorder, liver disease, renal disease, gastrointestinal disease, or neurological illness

    ?History of splenectomy

    ?Haematocrit <30%, serum creatinine >130 mmol/L, serum ALT>80 IU/L

    ?Recent (1 month) blood transfusion

    ?Previous vaccination with any experimental poxvirus vaccine

    ?Recent (2 weeks) administration of any other vaccine or immunoglobulin

    ?Positive HIV or hepatitis B surface antigen test

    ?Recent (3 months) participation in another clinical trial






    Click to view table


    Table 1. Reasons for exclusion from the study



    Click to view table


    Table 2. Number of volunteers excluded for one or more reason


    The most frequent reason for rejection was a strong PPD Elispot response, probably indicating the prevalence of exposure to environmental mycobacteria, as only 24% of the volunteers had responses to ESAT6 or CFP10. Approximately 65% of individuals screened had positive PPD Elispot responses, whereas only approximately 36% of them had a positive tuberculin skin test, illustrating the increased sensitivity of the PPD Elispot assay. A chest radiograph was done in all individuals, and anyone with an abnormal chest radiograph was referred to the general medical clinic at the MRC unit for further assessment. Antituberculous chemoprophylaxis was not given to anyone identified as being latently infected, since this is not the normal ?standard of care? in The Gambia.
    The aim of these early studies was to obtain safety data on this vaccine in an endemic area. Future studies will be done in individuals more representative of the general population.
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    Conclusions

    The first clinical trials with the candidate tuberculosis vaccine MVA85A have now been successfully completed in a tuberculosis-endemic setting in west Africa. A detailed report on safety and immunogenicity will be presented elsewhere. Entry criteria were established that minimised the risks of any tuberculosis-specific Koch reaction occurring. Participants were stratified according to mycobacterial load. Once safety was demonstrated in the ?most mycobacterially naive group?, the next trial, which recruited individuals with prior BCG vaccination, was done.
    Tuberculosis lags behind the other major pathogens of the developing world like HIV and malaria in terms of numbers of candidate vaccines evaluated in clinical trials. Any serious adverse event in a new tuberculosis vaccine trial would not only put back the development of that vaccine candidate, but would impact on the clinical progression of other tuberculosis vaccine candidates. As experience is gained with the new tuberculosis vaccines currently entering into early clinical trials, we will be able to set less stringent entry criteria for subsequent studies. However, these studies involved the first of the new generation vaccines to enter into clinical trials in a tuberculosis-endemic area, and MVA85A had been shown to induce strong cellular immune responses in the UK studies.17
    Once safety has been demonstrated in early clinical trials, trials can then be done in individuals who are more representative of the population in tuberculosis-endemic areas, including people who are latently infected with M tuberculosis, individuals who are infected with HIV, and individuals who are coinfected with M tuberculosis and HIV.
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    Search strategy and selection criteria

    To ensure that there were no vaccines currently in clinical development of which we were not aware, and which might inform this article, we searched PubMed (1996 to March 2006) using the terms ?tuberculosis? and ?vaccination? and limited the search to clinical trials. We reviewed the 251 titles and, where appropriate, the abstract. Only English language papers were reviewed.




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    Conflicts of interest
    AH is a cofounder of, and consultant to, Oxxon Therapeutics Ltd and HM is a shareholder. None of the other authors have any conflicts of interest to declare.

    Acknowledgments
    The phase I vaccine trials with MVA85A in The Gambia were funded by an EU 5th Framework Programme grant number QLK2-CT-2002-01613, with additional support from the Wellcome Trust and the UK MRC. We thank the many contributors to this study in the unit in The Gambia including the participants, field workers, and Simon Donkor, who created the trial database.
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  • #2
    Re: New tuberculosis vaccine, MVA85A

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    42. Floyd S, Ponnighaus JM, Bliss L, et al. BCG scars in northern Malawi: sensitivity and repeatability of scar reading, and factors affecting size. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis 2000; 4: 1133-1142. MEDLINE
    43. Schim van der Loeff MF, Sarge-Njie R, Ceesay S, et al. Regional differences in HIV trends in The Gambia: results from sentinel surveillance among pregnant women. AIDS 2003; 17: 1841-1846. MEDLINE
    44. Godfrey-Faussett P, Baggaley R, Mwinga A, et al. Recruitment to a trial of tuberculosis preventive therapy from a voluntary HIV testing centre in Lusaka: relevance to implementation. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg 1995; 89: 354-358. MEDLINE | CrossRef
    45. The National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research. The Belmont report. OPRR Reports. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, 1988:Report numberGPO 887?809.
    46. Emanuel EJ, Currie XE, Herman A. Undue inducement in clinical research in developing countries: is it a worry?. Lancet 2005; 366: 336-340. Full Text | PDF (73 KB) | CrossRef
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    • #3
      Table 1


      Table 1. Reasons for exclusion from the study

      Comment


      • #4
        Table 2


        Table 2. Number of volunteers excluded for one or more reason

        Comment


        • #5
          Older TB vaccines 'work better'

          Older versions of the BCG vaccine may be better at preventing cases of tuberculosis than more commonly used modern vaccines, say French scientists.


          Genetic changes in strains over the years have rendered newer vaccines less effective, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences report.
          The researchers at the Institut Pasteur say clinical trials should be done to retest the older strains.

          Modern BCG vaccine strains are used in two-thirds of immunisations worldwide.
          <!-- E SF -->
          The BCG vaccine was originally developed by French scientists in 1908 who managed to make a strain of tuberculosis (TB) less potent by growing it in a glycerin-potato mixture.

          <!-- S IBOX --><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=208 align=right border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width=5></TD><TD class=sibtbg> The later strains were selected because they had the least side effects but maybe the efficiency has become less and les


          Dr Roland Brosch, study leader

          </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!-- E IBOX -->
          This meant when used in a vaccine it would produce an immune response without causing the actual disease.

          Once they found it was safe, they began to distribute the vaccine around the world.

          At that time, the only way to keep the vaccine strain alive in the laboratory was to continue to grow it in the culture.

          Genetic analysis of strains sent to Japan and Russia in about 1925 and 'newer' strains that were sent to be used in Europe between the 1930s and 1960's showed that over time important genes were lost from the vaccine strain.

          The researchers said because of this loss newer versions of the vaccine may not produce as strong an immune reaction.

          Immune reaction

          A study in babies published last year found that the early Japan strain prompted a stronger immune reaction than three newer strains that are used in 66% of modern immunisations.

          Study leader, Dr Roland Brosch, senior researcher at the Institut said: "The earlier strains have undergone fewer genetic changes.

          "The later strains were selected because they had the least side effects but maybe the efficiency has become less and less."

          He added that as well as looking whether vaccination programmes should be using the earlier strains, research to try and modify the BCG vaccine to make it more effective may be more successful with the older vaccines.

          Professor Paul Fine, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine said the BCG story was a very complicated one.

          "These vaccines have been used for a long time and various different strains have been used but the results have been all over the place.

          "There are a number of different hypotheses as to why this is, but evaluating the effectiveness is not a trivial matter - it takes many years of work."

          A spokesperson for the Health Protection Agency said the study identified some potentially important differences between various vaccine strains.

          "Indeed, one of the 'early' strains identified in the study is currently being re-evaluated in clinical trials funded by the EU," they said.

          "A number of other approaches are being actively investigated to improve the protection provided by the current BCG vaccine strains.
          "Clinical trials over the next five to seven years will provide evidence as to which approach will be most successful."

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          • #6
            Tuberculosis Vaccines Information

            A MOTHER wants to rally other parents to protest after discovering the tuberculosis vaccine is no longer routinely offered to secondary school pupils.

            Paula Devlin, of Fairlands View, Balderstone, was appalled when her 12-year-old son Charlie came home from St Cuthbert?s RC High School with a letter from Heywood, Middleton and Rochdale PCT school health team explaining the anti-TB vaccine, known as the BCG, is no longer offered to all pupils.
            From now on the vaccine will only be offered to those at high risk of contracting the disease. Risk factors include if a parent or grandparent was born in a country with a high level of TB or if anyone in the close family had been in contact with a person with TB.
            Now Mrs Devlin, also mother to Amy, aged 17 and Matthew, aged two, wants parents of high school pupils, as well as younger children who will be faced with this situation in the future, to get behind her campaign to have the vaccine reinstated in schools.
            She said: ?Over the past few years the government has made such a fuss about the MMR jab and in the next breath it tells us our kids don?t need the BCG, even though the number of tuberculosis cases reported in the country is rising all the time.
            ?I have been told my child can?t have this done at the doctors, so it seems the only option now is to go private.?
            She has started a petition to have the vaccine reinstated in all secondary schools.
            Bernadine O?Sullivan, public health consultant for Rochdale, said: ?Reported cases of TB, year on year, are very low in Rochdale like many other parts of the country and, therefore, children living in Rochdale are at an extremely low risk of infection.
            ?The new BCG vaccination programme is specifically designed to target those individuals who are at greatest risk of catching the disease.
            ?Heywood, Middleton and Rochdale PCT is currently making new arrangements to test and immunise children at risk of TB according to the new Department of Health recommendations and BCG vaccinations will no longer be offered through schools.
            ?Anyone who is concerned about the changes to the BCG vaccination programme can visit the immunisation website on www.immunisation.nhs.uk where a factsheet is available or one can be provided by the PCT upon request.?
            The latest news and updates for the borough of Rochdale including towns such as Norden, Littleborough, Castleton, Heywood, Middleton and Milnrow. Breaking news, weather, crime updates, traffic and travel, property news, community news and the latest about Rochdale Borough Council. You'll also find the best events and what's on stories covering family and kids, things to do, pubs and restaurants, shopping, music and gigs and more. Follow on Facebook and Twitter. Sign up to our free daily newsletter

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            • #7
              Tuberculosis Vaccines Information

              Published: 14:00 11.05.2007 GMT+2 /HUGIN /Source: Crucell N.V. /AEX: CRXL /ISIN: NL0000358562

              Crucell, AERAS and SATVI Announce Start of Tuberculosis Vaccine Clinical Trial in South Africa six months after launching initial trial in the United States

              Leiden, The Netherlands, May 11, 2007 - Dutch biotechnology company Crucell N.V. (Euronext, NASDAQ: CRXL, Swiss Exchange: CRX), the Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation and the South African Tuberculosis Vaccine Initiative (SATVI) at the University of Cape Town today announced the launch of a new Phase I clinical trial of the unique AdVac&#174;-based tuberculosis vaccine, six months after launching a similar study in the US. The trial will be conducted in the Boland-Overberg region of Western Cape Province in South Africa, which has one of the world's highest TB burdens.

              "We are very proud that Crucell's technologies are playing a key role in the search and development of a much-needed TB vaccine," said Dr. Jaap Goudsmit, Chief Scientific Officer at Crucell. "We also feel honored to collaborate with Aeras and SATVI on this important mission."

              Aeras and Crucell began jointly developing this vaccine candidate, called AERAS-402, in 2004 using Crucell's AdVac&#174; vaccine technology and PER.C6&#174; manufacturing technology. A Phase I clinical trial launched in October 2006 in the United States indicates that the vaccine candidate is safe in healthy adults in the US. The main parameters under examination in the current study will be safety, tolerability and immunogenicity of AERAS-402 in healthy adults in South Africa.

              "The world desperately needs a new TB vaccine, and this clinical trial, in a region severely impacted by TB, is an important step in Aeras' mission to develop these crucial vaccines," said Dr. Jerald C. Sadoff, President and CEO of Aeras. "Aeras is delighted to be working with the excellent researchers at Crucell and SATVI. We are grateful to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs for their financial support of this trial and our vaccine development efforts."

              The trial will be conducted as a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled dose escalation study in three groups of healthy adults previously vaccinated with Bacille Calmette-Gu&#233;rin (BCG). A total of 30 healthy adult volunteers will be enrolled.

              "We are pleased to be playing such an important role in the global effort to develop new vaccines against TB," said Dr. Gregory Hussey, Principal Investigator for the trial. "In the process of conducting this trial, we are advancing the development of a new TB vaccine, expanding scientific capacity, and building awareness of the need for new TB vaccines."

              About tuberculosis

              Tuberculosis is the world's second deadliest infectious disease, with 8 to 9 million new cases diagnosed each year. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), an estimated 1.6 million people died from TB in 2005. One third of the world's population has been infected with the TB bacillus and current treatment takes 6-9 months. The current TB vaccine Bacillus Calmette-Gu&#233;rin (BCG), developed over 85 years ago, reduces the risk of severe forms of TB in early childhood, but is not very effective in preventing pulmonary TB in adolescents and adults - the populations with the highest rates of TB. TB is changing and evolving, making new vaccines more crucial to controlling the pandemic. Tuberculosis is now the leading cause of death for people with AIDS, particularly in Africa. Multi-drug resistant TB (MDR-TB) and extremely drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB) are hampering treatment and control efforts.

              About AdVac&#174; technology and Ad35

              AdVac&#174; technology is a vaccine technology developed by Crucell and is considered to play an important role in the fight against emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases, and in biodefense. The technology supports the practice of inserting genetic material from the disease-causing virus or parasite into a 'vehicle' called a vector, which then delivers the immunogenic material directly to the immune system. Most vectors are based on an adenovirus, such as the virus that causes the common cold. The AdVac&#174; technology is specifically designed to manage the problem of pre-existing immunity in humans against the most commonly used recombinant vaccine vector, adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5), without compromising large-scale production capabilities or the immunogenic properties of Ad5. AdVac&#174; technology is based on adenovirus vectors that do not regularly occur in the human population, such as Ad35. In contrast to the AdVac&#174; vectors, antibodies to Ad5 are widespread among people of all ages and are known to lower the immune response to Ad5-based vaccines, thereby impairing the efficacy of these vaccines. All vaccine candidates based on AdVac&#174; are produced using Crucell's PER.C6&#174; production technology.

              About PER.C6&#174; technology

              Crucell's PER.C6&#174; technology is a cell line developed for the large-scale manufacture of biopharmaceutical products including vaccines. The production scale potential of the PER.C6&#174; cell line has been demonstrated in an unprecedented successful bioreactor run of 20,000 liters. Compared to conventional production technologies, the strengths of the PER.C6&#174; technology lie in its excellent safety profile, scalability and productivity under serum-free culture conditions. These characteristics, combined with its ability to support the growth of both human and animal viruses, make PER.C6&#174; technology the biopharmaceutical production technology of choice for Crucell's current and potential pharmaceutical and biotechnology partners.

              About Aeras

              The Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation (www.aeras.org) is a non-profit organization working as a Product Development Partnership to develop new tuberculosis vaccines and ensure that they are distributed to all who need them around the world. Dr. Jerald C. Sadoff, President and CEO of Aeras, has worked in vaccine development for more than 30 years. He led efforts to develop and obtain licensure for nine currently licensed vaccines and has been involved in the research and development of numerous other vaccines. Aeras is primarily funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and also receives important support from the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Danish International Development Agency, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Aeras is based in Rockville, Maryland, where it recently opened a state-of-the-art manufacturing and laboratory facility.

              About Crucell

              Crucell N.V. (Euronext, NASDAQ: CRXL; Swiss Exchange: CRX) is a biotechnology company focused on research, development and worldwide marketing of vaccines and antibodies that prevent and treat infectious diseases. Its vaccines are sold in public and private markets worldwide. Crucell's core portfolio includes a vaccine against hepatitis B, a fully-liquid vaccine against five important childhood diseases, and a virosome-adjuvanted vaccine against influenza. Crucell also markets travel vaccines, such as the only oral anti-typhoid vaccine, an oral cholera vaccine and the only aluminum-free hepatitis A vaccine on the market. The Company has a broad development pipeline, with several Crucell products based on its unique PER.C6&#174; production technology. The Company licenses this and other technologies to the biopharmaceutical industry. Important partners and licensees include DSM Biologics, sanofi aventis, GSK and Merck & Co. Crucell is headquartered in Leiden (the Netherlands), with subsidiaries in Switzerland, Spain, Italy, Sweden, Korea and the US. The Company employs over a 1000 people. For more information, please visit www.crucell.com.

              About SATVI

              The South African Tuberculosis Vaccine Initiative is located in the Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine at the University of Cape Town (UCT). Since 1999, with funding largely from the Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation, SATVI has been developing capacity to conduct registration standard vaccine trials at a site in Worcester, some 110km outside Cape Town, where rates of tuberculosis are amongst the highest in the world. SATVI has a state of the art immunology laboratory located at UCT where the complex assays needed for TB vaccine studies can be performed. In the last 6 years SATVI has conducted a number of very large field trials and epidemiological cohort studies of the type which will be necessary to test the efficacy of new tuberculosis vaccines, involving thousands or tens of thousands of participants, as well as a number of smaller phase one and two trials of new TB vaccines. In addition, SATVI conducts cutting edge basic science research aimed at better understanding the human immune response to tuberculosis and to tuberculosis vaccines. For more information, please visit www.satvi.uct.za.

              From my mailbox
              ?Addressing chronic disease is an issue of human rights ? that must be our call to arms"
              Richard Horton, Editor-in-Chief The Lancet

              ~~~~ Twitter:@GertvanderHoek ~~~ GertvanderHoek@gmail.com ~~~

              Comment


              • #8
                Tuberculosis Vaccines Information

                Trials start on new TB vaccine

                BBC, News, BBC News, news online, world, uk, international, foreign, british, online, service

                Comment


                • #9
                  Tuberculosis Vaccines Information

                  Aeras and Crucell Announce Start of a Tuberculosis Vaccine Clinical Trial in the United States.

                  Aeras commits a further USD 5 million to the development of the tuberculosis vaccine

                  WEBWIRE ? Friday, December 21, 2007

                  Dutch biotechnology company Crucell N.V. (Euronext, NASDAQ: CRXL; Swiss Exchange: CRX) today announced it will receive up to USD 5 million from Rockville, Maryland-headquartered Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation to support the advanced development of the candidate AdVac?- and PER.C6?-based tuberculosis vaccine.


                  Crucell and Aeras also announced the launch of a new Phase I BCG-Ad35 prime boost clinical trial of the unique AdVac?-based tuberculosis vaccine, weeks sooner than expected. The trial will be conducted in St. Louis, Missouri, USA under the direction of Dr. Daniel F. Hoft at the Saint Louis University Center for Vaccine Development.


                  "We are very proud that Crucell?s technologies are playing a key role in the search and development of a much-needed TB vaccine" said Dr. Jaap Goudsmit, Chief Scientific Officer at Crucell. "We also feel honored to collaborate with Aeras on this important mission"


                  Aeras and Crucell began jointly developing this vaccine candidate, called AERAS-402, in 2004 using Crucell?s AdVac? vaccine technology and PER.C6? manufacturing technology. A Phase I clinical trial launched in October 2006 in the United States, indicates that the vaccine candidate is safe in healthy adults in the US. A second study in progress in healthy adults in South Africa appears to be showing safety, tolerability and immunogenicity of AERAS-402.


                  The main parameters under examination in the St. Louis study will be the immunogenicity and safety of BCG prime followed by two AERAS-402 boost doses administered at three to six month intervals after BCG in healthy adults.


                  The trial will be conducted as double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study in 32 healthy adult volunteers.

                  More: http://www.webwire.com/ViewPressRel.asp?aId=55705
                  ?Addressing chronic disease is an issue of human rights ? that must be our call to arms"
                  Richard Horton, Editor-in-Chief The Lancet

                  ~~~~ Twitter:@GertvanderHoek ~~~ GertvanderHoek@gmail.com ~~~

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Tuberculosis Vaccines Information

                    Originally posted by JJackson View Post
                    Trials start on new TB vaccine

                    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/6919537.stm
                    Trials start on new TB vaccine

                    The first new TB vaccine for 80 years is being tested in clinical trials in South Africa.

                    Oxford University researchers say that the jab, given alongside the current BCG vaccine, could protect people better from the disease.

                    TB kills more than two million people worldwide a year, and drug resistant forms are becoming more common.

                    Charity TB Alert said an effective, cheap and long-lasting vaccine could justify widespread use in the UK.


                    The Health Protection Agency recorded more than 8,500 cases in 2005, but the BCG vaccine, which used to be given to all schoolchildren in the UK, is currently targeted only at communities with high rates of the infection, such as immigrant groups and the homeless.

                    The new vaccine has already passed safety trials in the Gambia, and the latest tests in the Western Cape area of South Africa, where one in 100 infants has the illness, will reveal if the extra jab works better than BCG alone.

                    Dr Helen McShane, the Oxford University and Wellcome Trust researcher leading the project, said: "This vaccine is safe, and stimulates very high levels of the type of immune response we think we need to protect against TB.

                    "It is important for us to test whether or not this vaccine does work to stop people getting TB."

                    'One step ahead'

                    The results of the Gambian trials suggest that the vaccine is having a big impact on how the body's immune system is primed to resist TB infection.

                    It works by stimulating immune system cells called T-cells to produce a stronger response to the BCG jab.

                    TB Alert, a charity which campaigns for wider awareness of the global cost of TB, said that a new tool in the fight against the disease would be a "great step forward".

                    A spokesman said: "The TB bacterium has for too long managed to stay a step ahead of human efforts, as shown by the appearance, especially in HIV positive populations in southern Africa, of a strain of tuberculosis resistant to virtually all known drugs."

                    She added that if the vaccine proved to be safe, cheap and far more effective than BCG, with its effects lasting throughout life, then the reintroduction of universal immunisation in the UK "might be worthwhile".

                    Story from BBC NEWS:

                    BBC, News, BBC News, news online, world, uk, international, foreign, british, online, service


                    Published: 2007/07/28 01:56:24 GMT
                    ?Addressing chronic disease is an issue of human rights ? that must be our call to arms"
                    Richard Horton, Editor-in-Chief The Lancet

                    ~~~~ Twitter:@GertvanderHoek ~~~ GertvanderHoek@gmail.com ~~~

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