Bibliographic Details
Title: |
Intranasal Sendai Virus Vaccination of Seropositive Children 1 to 2 Years of Age in a Phase I Clinical Trial Boosts Immune Responses Toward Human Parainfluenza Virus Type 1. |
Authors: |
Adderson, Elisabeth, Allison, Kim J., Branum, Kristen, Sealy, Robert E., Jones, Bart G., Surman, Sherri L., Penkert, Rhiannon R., Hayden, Randall T., Russell, Charles J., Portner, Allen, Slobod, Karen S., Hurwitz, Julia L. |
Source: |
Vaccines; Apr2025, Vol. 13 Issue 4, p430, 11p |
Subject Terms: |
SENDAI virus, PEDIATRIC respiratory diseases, VIRAL antibodies, NASAL mucosa, VACCINATION of children |
Abstract: |
Background/Objectives: Human parainfluenza virus type 1 (hPIV-1) is a major cause of serious respiratory diseases in young children. Annually, hPIV-1 results in approximately 10,000 hospitalizations in the United States due to croup, bronchiolitis, and/or pneumonia, and 10,000 deaths worldwide due to acute lower respiratory tract infections among children less than 5 years of age. Despite the burden of disease, no vaccine for hPIV-1 is currently approved. Sendai virus (SeV) is a murine PIV-1. It has structural similarities with hPIV-1 and is currently under clinical development as an hPIV-1 Jennerian vaccine. Attributes of SeV include the following: (a) needleless delivery, (b) rapid and durable serum antibody responses after a single intranasal administration, (c) durable IgG and IgA responses in the nasal mucosa, and (d) use as a platform for recombinant vaccines against multiple pediatric pathogens. Evaluation of the tolerability, safety, and immunogenicity of intranasal SeV in healthy adults and seropositive children 3 to 6 years of age was previously conducted and supported vaccine advancement to evaluation in younger children. Methods: Three seropositive children 1 to 2 years of age received a single intranasal dose of 5 × 105 EID50 SeV (SENDAI, Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00186927). Adverse events were collected for 28 days post-vaccine administration using diary cards and participants were followed for six months in total. Sera were collected longitudinally for clinical laboratory and virus-specific antibody tests. Nasal swabs were collected longitudinally for virus and mucosal antibody tests. Results: Intranasal SeV was well tolerated, with only mild grade 1–2 events that resolved spontaneously. No serious adverse events, medically attended adverse events, or adverse events causing protocol termination were reported. One participant had positive nasal swabs for inoculated SeV during the first week after vaccination. Although children had measurable PIV-1-specific serum antibodies at baseline, intranasal SeV vaccination resulted in significant serum antibody increases in all participants. Similarly, there were significant increases in PIV-1-specific nasal IgG and IgA levels in all participants. Elevated antibody levels persisted through the six months of follow-up. Conclusions: Intranasal SeV was well tolerated and uniformly immunogenic in seropositive children 1 to 2 years of age. Results encourage the further evaluation of SeV and SeV-based recombinants as potential intranasal vaccines for the prevention of infection by hPIV-1 and other serious respiratory pathogens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
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Database: |
Complementary Index |