PLoS ONE (Aug 2008)

Phase 1 trial of AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel plus CPG 7909: an asexual blood-stage vaccine for Plasmodium falciparum malaria.

  • Gregory E D Mullen,
  • Ruth D Ellis,
  • Kazutoyo Miura,
  • Elissa Malkin,
  • Caroline Nolan,
  • Mhorag Hay,
  • Michael P Fay,
  • Allan Saul,
  • Daming Zhu,
  • Kelly Rausch,
  • Samuel Moretz,
  • Hong Zhou,
  • Carole A Long,
  • Louis H Miller,
  • John Treanor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002940
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 8
p. e2940

Abstract

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Apical Membrane Antigen 1 (AMA1), a polymorphic merozoite surface protein, is a leading blood-stage malaria vaccine candidate. This is the first reported use in humans of an investigational vaccine, AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel, with the novel adjuvant CPG 7909.A phase 1 trial was conducted at the University of Rochester with 75 malaria-naive volunteers to assess the safety and immunogenicity of the AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+CPG 7909 malaria vaccine. Participants were sequentially enrolled and randomized within dose escalating cohorts to receive three vaccinations on days 0, 28 and 56 of either 20 microg of AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+564 microg CPG 7909 (n = 15), 80 microg of AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel (n = 30), or 80 microg of AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+564 microg CPG 7909 (n = 30).Local and systemic adverse events were significantly more likely to be of higher severity with the addition of CPG 7909. Anti-AMA1 immunoglobulin G (IgG) were detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and the immune sera of volunteers that received 20 microg or 80 microg of AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+CPG 7909 had up to 14 fold significant increases in anti-AMA1 antibody concentration compared to 80 microg of AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel alone. The addition of CPG 7909 to the AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel vaccine in humans also elicited AMA1 specific immune IgG that significantly and dramatically increased the in vitro growth inhibition of homologous parasites to levels as high as 96% inhibition.The safety profile of the AMA1-C1/Alhydrogel+CPG 7909 malaria vaccine is acceptable, given the significant increase in immunogenicity observed. Further clinical development is ongoing.ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00344539.