Two chemoattenuated PfSPZ malaria vaccines induce sterile hepatic immunity.

Journal: Nature
Published:
Abstract

The global decline in malaria has stalled1, emphasizing the need for vaccines that induce durable sterilizing immunity. Here we optimized regimens for chemoprophylaxis vaccination (CVac), for which aseptic, purified, cryopreserved, infectious Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites (PfSPZ) were inoculated under prophylactic cover with pyrimethamine (PYR) (Sanaria PfSPZ-CVac(PYR)) or chloroquine (CQ) (PfSPZ-CVac(CQ))-which kill liver-stage and blood-stage parasites, respectively-and we assessed vaccine efficacy against homologous (that is, the same strain as the vaccine) and heterologous (a different strain) controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) three months after immunization ( https://clinicaltrials.gov/ , NCT02511054 and NCT03083847). We report that a fourfold increase in the dose of PfSPZ-CVac(PYR) from 5.12 × 104 to 2 × 105 PfSPZs transformed a minimal vaccine efficacy (low dose, two out of nine (22.2%) participants protected against homologous CHMI), to a high-level vaccine efficacy with seven out of eight (87.5%) individuals protected against homologous and seven out of nine (77.8%) protected against heterologous CHMI. Increased protection was associated with Vδ2 γδ T cell and antibody responses. At the higher dose, PfSPZ-CVac(CQ) protected six out of six (100%) participants against heterologous CHMI three months after immunization. All homologous (four out of four) and heterologous (eight out of eight) infectivity control participants showed parasitaemia. PfSPZ-CVac(CQ) and PfSPZ-CVac(PYR) induced a durable, sterile vaccine efficacy against a heterologous South American strain of P. falciparum, which has a genome and predicted CD8 T cell immunome that differs more strongly from the African vaccine strain than other analysed African P. falciparum strains.

Authors
Agnes Mwakingwe Omari, Sara Healy, Jacquelyn Lane, David Cook, Sahand Kalhori, Charles Wyatt, Aarti Kolluri, Omely Marte Salcedo, Alemush Imeru, Martha Nason, Lei Ding, Hope Decederfelt, Junhui Duan, Jillian Neal, Jacob Raiten, Grace Lee, Jen Hume, Jihyun Jeon, Ijeoma Ikpeama, Natasha Kc, Sumana Chakravarty, Tooba Murshedkar, L W Church, Anita Manoj, Anusha Gunasekera, Charles Anderson, Sean Murphy, Sandra March, Sangeeta Bhatia, Eric James, Peter Billingsley, B Kim Sim, Thomas Richie, Irfan Zaidi, Stephen Hoffman, Patrick Duffy
Relevant Conditions

Malaria