McCormick A Louise, Mocarski Edward S
Laboratory of Biochemical Pharmacology, Department of Pediatrics, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology and Emory Vaccine Center, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Cell Mol Immunol. 2015 Mar;12(2):170-9. doi: 10.1038/cmi.2014.120. Epub 2014 Dec 29.
A universal cytomegalovirus (CMV) vaccination promises to reduce the burden of the developmental damage that afflicts up to 0.5% of live births worldwide. An effective vaccination that prevents transplacental transmission would reduce CMV congenital disease and CMV-associated still births and leave populations less susceptible to opportunistic CMV disease. Thus, a vaccination against this virus has long been recognized for the potential of enormous health-care savings because congenital damage is life-long and existing anti-viral options are limited. Vaccine researchers, industry leaders, and regulatory representatives have discussed the challenges posed by clinical efficacy trials that would lead to a universal CMV vaccine, reviewing the links between infection and disease, and identifying settings where disrupting viral transmission might provide a surrogate endpoint for disease prevention. Reducing the complexity of such trials would facilitate vaccine development. Children and adolescents are the targets for universal vaccination, with the expectation of protecting the offspring of immunized women. Given that a majority of females worldwide experience CMV infection during childhood, a universal vaccine must boost natural immunity and reduce transmission due to reactivation and re-infection as well as primary infection during pregnancy. Although current vaccine strategies recognize the value of humoral and cellular immunity, the precise mechanisms that act at the placental interface remain elusive. Immunity resulting from natural infection appears to limit rather than prevent reactivation of latent viruses and susceptibility to re-infection, leaving a challenge for universal vaccination to improve upon natural immunity levels. Despite these hurdles, early phase clinical trials have achieved primary end points in CMV seronegative subjects. Efficacy studies must be expanded to mixed populations of CMV-naive and naturally infected subjects to understand the overall efficacy and potential. Together with CMV vaccine candidates currently in clinical development, additional promising preclinical strategies continue to come forward; however, these face limitations due to the insufficient understanding of host defense mechanisms that prevent transmission, as well as the age-old challenges of reaching the appropriate threshold of immunogenicity, efficacy, durability and potency. This review focuses on the current understanding of natural and CMV vaccine-induced protective immunity.
一种通用的巨细胞病毒(CMV)疫苗有望减轻发育损伤的负担,这种损伤影响着全球高达0.5%的活产儿。一种能预防经胎盘传播的有效疫苗将减少CMV先天性疾病和CMV相关的死产,并使人群对机会性CMV疾病的易感性降低。因此,长期以来人们一直认识到针对这种病毒的疫苗具有巨大的医疗保健节省潜力,因为先天性损伤是终身的,而现有的抗病毒选择有限。疫苗研究人员、行业领袖和监管代表讨论了导致通用CMV疫苗的临床疗效试验所带来的挑战,回顾了感染与疾病之间的联系,并确定了破坏病毒传播可能为疾病预防提供替代终点的情况。降低此类试验的复杂性将促进疫苗开发。儿童和青少年是通用疫苗接种的目标人群,期望能保护接种疫苗女性的后代。鉴于全球大多数女性在儿童时期都会感染CMV,通用疫苗必须增强自然免疫力,并减少因潜伏病毒激活、再次感染以及孕期初次感染而导致的传播。尽管目前的疫苗策略认识到体液免疫和细胞免疫的价值,但在胎盘界面起作用的精确机制仍然难以捉摸。自然感染产生的免疫力似乎只能限制而非预防潜伏病毒的激活和再次感染的易感性,这给通用疫苗接种带来了挑战,即要在自然免疫水平上有所提高。尽管存在这些障碍,但早期临床试验已在CMV血清阴性受试者中达到主要终点。疗效研究必须扩大到CMV初免和自然感染受试者的混合人群,以了解总体疗效和潜力。与目前正在进行临床开发的CMV候选疫苗一起,其他有前景的临床前策略也不断涌现;然而,由于对预防传播的宿主防御机制了解不足,以及在达到免疫原性、疗效、持久性和效力的适当阈值方面存在长期挑战,这些策略面临着局限性。本综述重点关注目前对自然免疫和CMV疫苗诱导的保护性免疫的理解。