Aebischer T, Bumann D, Epple H J, Metzger W, Schneider T, Cherepnev G, Walduck A K, Kunkel D, Moos V, Loddenkemper C, Jiadze I, Panasyuk M, Stolte M, Graham D Y, Zeitz M, Meyer T F
Department of Molecular Biology, Max-Planck Institute for Infection Biology, Berlin, Germany.
Gut. 2008 Aug;57(8):1065-72. doi: 10.1136/gut.2007.145839. Epub 2008 Apr 16.
Helicobacter pylori remains a global health hazard, and vaccination would be ideal for its control. Natural infection appears not to induce protective immunity. Thus, the feasibility of a vaccine for humans is doubtful.
In two prospective, randomised, double-blind, controlled studies (Paul Ehrlich Institute application nos 0802/02 and 1097/01), live vaccines against H pylori were tested in human volunteers seronegative for, and without evidence of, active H pylori infection. Volunteers (n = 58) were immunised orally with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi Ty21a expressing H pylori urease or HP0231, or solely with Ty21a, and then challenged with 2x10(5) cagPAI(-) H pylori. Adverse events, infection, humoral, cellular and mucosal immune response were monitored. Gastric biopsies were taken before and after vaccination, and postchallenge. Infection was terminated with antibiotics.
Vaccines were well tolerated. Challenge infection induced transient, mild to moderate dyspeptic symptoms, and histological and transcriptional changes in the mucosa known from chronic infection. Vaccines did not show satisfactory protection. However, 13 of 58 volunteers, 8 vaccinees and 5 controls, became breath test negative and either cleared H pylori (5/13) completely or reduced the H pylori burden (8/13). H pylori-specific T helper cells were detected in 9 of these 13 (69%), but only in 6 of 45 (13%) breath test-positive volunteers (p = 0.0002; Fisher exact test). T cells were either vaccine induced or pre-existing, depending on the volunteer.
Challenge infection offers a controlled model for vaccine testing. Importantly, it revealed evidence for T cell-mediated immunity against H pylori infection in humans.
幽门螺杆菌仍是全球健康危害,接种疫苗是控制该菌的理想方法。自然感染似乎不会诱导保护性免疫。因此,人类疫苗的可行性令人怀疑。
在两项前瞻性、随机、双盲、对照研究(保罗·埃利希研究所申请编号0802/02和1097/01)中,针对幽门螺杆菌的活疫苗在幽门螺杆菌血清阴性且无活动性幽门螺杆菌感染证据的人类志愿者中进行了测试。志愿者(n = 58)口服接种表达幽门螺杆菌脲酶或HP0231的伤寒沙门氏菌血清型Typhi Ty21a,或仅接种Ty21a,然后用2×10⁵ cagPAI(-)幽门螺杆菌进行攻击。监测不良事件、感染、体液、细胞和黏膜免疫反应。在接种疫苗前后以及攻击后进行胃活检。用抗生素终止感染。
疫苗耐受性良好。攻击感染引起短暂的、轻度至中度的消化不良症状,以及慢性感染中已知的黏膜组织学和转录变化。疫苗未显示出令人满意的保护作用。然而,58名志愿者中的13名,8名接种疫苗者和5名对照者,呼气试验呈阴性,其中5/13完全清除了幽门螺杆菌,8/13减轻了幽门螺杆菌负担。在这13名中的9名(69%)检测到幽门螺杆菌特异性辅助性T细胞,但在45名呼气试验阳性志愿者中仅6名(13%)检测到(p = 0.0002;Fisher精确检验)。T细胞要么是疫苗诱导的,要么是预先存在的,这取决于志愿者。
攻击感染为疫苗测试提供了一个可控模型。重要的是,它揭示了人类中T细胞介导的抗幽门螺杆菌感染免疫的证据。