• Vaccine · Jun 2016

    Review

    Advancing a vaccine to prevent human schistosomiasis.

    • Maureen Merrifield, Peter J Hotez, Coreen M Beaumier, Portia Gillespie, Ulrich Strych, Tara Hayward, and Maria Elena Bottazzi.
    • Sabin Vaccine Institute and Texas Children's Hospital Center for Vaccine Development Houston, TX, USA; Sabin Vaccine Institute, Washington, DC, USA.
    • Vaccine. 2016 Jun 3; 34 (26): 2988-2991.

    AbstractSeveral candidate human schistosomiasis vaccines are in different stages of preclinical and clinical development. The major targets are Schistosoma haematobium (urogenitial schistosomiasis) and Schistosoma mansoni (intestinal schistosomiasis) that account for 99% of the world's 252 million cases, with 90% of these cases in Africa. Two recombinant S. mansoni vaccines - Sm-TSP-2 and Sm-14 are in Phase 1 trials, while Smp80 (calpain) is undergoing testing in non-human primates. Sh28GST, also known as Bilhvax is in advanced clinical development for S. haematobium infection. The possibility remains that some of these vaccines may cross-react to target both schistosome species. These vaccines were selected on the basis of their protective immunity in preclinical challenge models, through human immune-epidemiological studies or both. They are being advanced through a combination of academic research institutions, non-profit vaccine product development partnerships, biotechnology companies, and developing country vaccine manufacturers. In addition, new schistosome candidate vaccines are being identified through bioinformatics, OMICs approaches, and moderate throughput screening, although the full potential of reverse vaccinology for schistosomiasis has not yet been realized. The target product profiles of these vaccines vary but many focus on vaccinating children, in some cases following mass treatment with praziquantel, also known as vaccine-linked chemotherapy. Several regulatory pathways have been proposed, some of which rely on World Health Organization prequalification.Copyright © 2016 World Health Organization. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.

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