Banadyga L, Stein D R, Qiu X, Safronetz D
Zoonotic Diseases and Special Pathogens Program, National Microbiology Laboratory, Public Health Agency of Canada, Winnipeg, MB.
Department of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB.
Can Commun Dis Rep. 2018 Jun 7;44(6):139-147. doi: 10.14745/ccdr.v44i06a04.
Lassa virus (LASV) is a persistent global health threat that causes about half a million cases of Lassa fever each year in Western Africa. Although most cases are mild, the disease can cause significant morbidity and results in as many as 5,000 deaths per year. Since 2015, Nigeria has been experiencing a severe and extended outbreak of Lassa fever, raising concerns that it could spill over into other countries and reach a magnitude similar to the West African Ebola outbreak of 2013-2016. Despite the burden that Lassa fever places on public health, both in Africa and around the world, there are still no clinically-approved therapeutics or vaccines to treat or prevent it. Nevertheless, a number of promising candidate vaccines have been developed over the last several years, and there is a growing political and social determination to drive at least one of these candidates towards licensure. This paper describes a LASV vaccine candidate that is being developed at Canada's National Microbiology Laboratory. Based on the same live attenuated vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) vaccine platform that was used to produce the successful Ebola virus vaccine, the VSV-based LASV vaccine has been shown to elicit a potent and protective immune response against LASV. The vaccine shows 100% protection in the "gold-standard" nonhuman primate model of Lassa fever, inducing both humoral and cellular immune responses. Moreover, studies have shown that a single vaccination may offer universal protection against numerous different strains of the virus, and additional studies have shown that immunization with the VSV platform appears to be unaffected by pre-existing immunity to VSV. The next step in the development of the VSV-based LASV vaccine is phase I human clinical trials to assess vaccine safety and dosage.
拉沙病毒(LASV)是一种持续存在的全球健康威胁,每年在西非导致约50万例拉沙热病例。尽管大多数病例症状较轻,但该疾病可导致严重发病,每年造成多达5000人死亡。自2015年以来,尼日利亚一直在经历拉沙热的严重且持续的疫情爆发,引发了人们对其可能蔓延到其他国家并达到与2013 - 2016年西非埃博拉疫情类似规模的担忧。尽管拉沙热给非洲乃至全球的公共卫生带来了负担,但目前仍没有临床批准的治疗方法或疫苗来治疗或预防该疾病。然而,在过去几年中已经开发出了一些有前景的候选疫苗,并且推动至少一种候选疫苗获得许可的政治和社会决心也在不断增强。本文描述了一种正在加拿大国家微生物实验室研发的拉沙病毒候选疫苗。基于用于生产成功的埃博拉病毒疫苗的相同减毒活水泡性口炎病毒(VSV)疫苗平台,基于VSV的拉沙病毒疫苗已被证明能引发针对拉沙病毒的强效保护性免疫反应。该疫苗在拉沙热的“金标准”非人灵长类动物模型中显示出100%的保护率,可诱导体液免疫和细胞免疫反应。此外,研究表明单次接种疫苗可能对多种不同病毒株提供普遍保护,并且其他研究表明用VSV平台进行免疫似乎不受先前对VSV免疫的影响。基于VSV的拉沙病毒疫苗研发的下一步是进行I期人体临床试验,以评估疫苗的安全性和剂量。