PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Refinement of the CS6-expressing enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli strain B7A human challenge model: A randomized trial.

  • Kawsar R Talaat,
  • Chad K Porter,
  • Kayla M Jaep,
  • Christopher A Duplessis,
  • Ramiro L Gutierrez,
  • Milton Maciel,
  • Brittany Adjoodani,
  • Brittany Feijoo,
  • Subhra Chakraborty,
  • Jessica Brubaker,
  • Stefanie A Trop,
  • Mark S Riddle,
  • Sabrina S Joseph,
  • A Louis Bourgeois,
  • Michael G Prouty

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239888
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 12
p. e0239888

Abstract

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BackgroundHuman challenge models for enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) facilitate vaccine down-selection. The B7A (O148:H28 CS6+LT+ST+) strain is important for vaccine development. We sought to refine the B7A model by identifying a dose and fasting regimen consistently inducing moderate-severe diarrhea.MethodsAn initial cohort of 28 subjects was randomized (1:1:1:1) to receive B7A following an overnight fast at doses of 108 or 109 colony forming units (cfu) or a 90-minute fast at doses of 109 or 1010 cfu. A second cohort included naïve and rechallenged subjects who had moderate-severe diarrhea and were given the target regimen. Immune responses to important ETEC antigens were assessed.ResultsAmong subjects receiving 108 cfu of B7A, overnight fast, or 109 cfu, 90-minute fast, 42.9% (3/7) had moderate-severe diarrhea. Higher attack rates (71.4%; 5/7) occurred in subjects receiving 109 cfu, overnight fast, or 1010 cfu, 90-minute fast. Upon rechallenge with 109 cfu of B7A, overnight fast, 5/11 (45.5%) had moderate-severe diarrhea; the attack rate among concurrently challenge naïve subjects was 57.9% (11/19). Anti-CS6, O148 LPS and LT responses were modest across all groups.ConclusionsAn overnight fast enabled a reduction in the B7A inoculum dose; however, the attack rate was inconsistent and protection upon rechallenge was minimal.