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  • Safety and immunogenicity o...
    Younis, Brima M.; Osman, Mohamed; Khalil, Eltahir A.G.; Santoro, Francesco; Furini, Simone; Wiggins, Rebecca; Keding, Ada; Carraro, Monica; Musa, Anas E.A.; Abdarahaman, Mujahid A.A.; Mandefield, Laura; Bland, Martin; Aebischer, Toni; Gabe, Rhian; Layton, Alison M.; Lacey, Charles J.N.; Kaye, Paul M.; Musa, Ahmed M.

    Molecular therapy, 07/2021, Letnik: 29, Številka: 7
    Journal Article

    Post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis (PKDL) is a chronic, stigmatizing skin condition occurring frequently after apparent clinical cure from visceral leishmaniasis. Given an urgent need for new treatments, we conducted a phase IIa safety and immunogenicity trial of ChAd63-KH vaccine in Sudanese patients with persistent PKDL. LEISH2a (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02894008) was an open-label three-phase clinical trial involving sixteen adult and eight adolescent patients with persistent PKDL (median duration, 30 months; range, 6–180 months). Patients received a single intramuscular vaccination of 1 × 1010 viral particles (v.p.; adults only) or 7.5 × 1010 v.p. (adults and adolescents), with primary (safety) and secondary (clinical response and immunogenicity) endpoints evaluated over 42–120 days follow-up. AmBisome was provided to patients with significant remaining disease at their last visit. ChAd63-KH vaccine showed minimal adverse reactions in PKDL patients and induced potent innate and cell-mediated immune responses measured by whole-blood transcriptomics and ELISpot. 7/23 patients (30.4%) monitored to study completion showed >90% clinical improvement, and 5/23 (21.7%) showed partial improvement. A logistic regression model applied to blood transcriptomic data identified immune modules predictive of patients with >90% clinical improvement. A randomized controlled trial to determine whether these clinical responses were vaccine-related and whether ChAd63-KH vaccine has clinical utility is underway. Display omitted Post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis (PKDL) is a chronic parasitic disease with limited treatment options. Here, Musa and colleagues report on a phase IIa therapeutic trial of the adenoviral-vectored leishmaniasis vaccine ChAd63-KH. Single-dose vaccination with ChAd63-KH was safe and induced innate and T cell responses in Sudanese patients with PKDL.