Habibi Maximillian S, Chiu Christopher
National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, London W2 1PG, UK.
Section of Infectious Diseases & Immunity, Imperial College London, London W12 0NN, UK.
Vaccine. 2017 Jan 11;35(3):489-495. doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2016.08.086. Epub 2016 Nov 23.
Despite the recent explosion in RSV vaccine development, there remain substantial hurdles to overcome before licensing of effective vaccines will allow widespread use, particularly in high-risk populations. Incomplete understanding of mechanisms and correlates of protection against RSV mean that, for the time being, successful RSV vaccines must directly demonstrate efficacy, which necessitates large and costly clinical trials in naturally infected patients. To mitigate the risks inherent in progressing to these late-stage trials, experimental human RSV infection studies have recently been re-established, representing the interface between pre-clinical models and observational studies of patients. Not only can they be used for early proof-of-concept clinical trials to test vaccine efficacy, but human challenge studies also offer the potential to better understand protective immunity against RSV infection to improve vaccine design and delivery. In the past, controlled human infection studies with RSV have been instrumental in elucidating the influence of factors such as route of infection and type of inoculum on the course of disease. Recently, efficacy trials of novel RSV antiviral drugs have also been successfully undertaken. Now, with advances in technology, detailed investigations of human mucosal immunity in the RSV-infected airway are possible. These have indicated defects in RSV-induced humoral and CD8+ T cell immunity that may contribute to the recurrent symptomatic infection that occurs throughout life and should be circumvented by optimal vaccines. Here, we discuss the insights derived from RSV human challenge models; the major impediments to their more widespread uptake; and their potential benefit in accelerating vaccine development, including future directions to further enhance the relevance of these models to at-risk patient populations.
尽管呼吸道合胞病毒(RSV)疫苗研发最近取得了飞速进展,但在有效疫苗获得许可并得以广泛应用之前,仍有诸多重大障碍需要克服,尤其是在高危人群中。对RSV免疫机制和保护相关性的认识尚不完整,这意味着目前成功的RSV疫苗必须直接证明其有效性,这就需要在自然感染患者中开展大规模且成本高昂的临床试验。为降低推进这些后期试验所固有的风险,近期重新开展了人体RSV感染实验研究,这代表了临床前模型与患者观察性研究之间的衔接。它们不仅可用于早期概念验证临床试验以测试疫苗疗效,而且人体激发试验还有助于更好地理解针对RSV感染的保护性免疫,从而改进疫苗设计与接种方案。过去,RSV的人体对照感染研究对阐明感染途径和接种物类型等因素对病程的影响起到了重要作用。近期,新型RSV抗病毒药物的疗效试验也已成功开展。如今,随着技术进步,对RSV感染气道中的人体黏膜免疫进行详细研究成为可能。这些研究表明,RSV诱导的体液免疫和CD8 + T细胞免疫存在缺陷,这可能导致终生反复出现症状性感染,而最佳疫苗应能避免这种情况。在此,我们讨论从RSV人体激发模型中获得的见解、更广泛应用这些模型的主要障碍,以及它们在加速疫苗研发方面的潜在益处,包括进一步提高这些模型与高危患者群体相关性的未来方向。