A randomized first-in-human phase I trial of differentially adjuvanted Pfs48/45 malaria vaccines in Burkinabé adults

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Abstract

BACKGROUND. Malaria transmission-blocking vaccines aim to interrupt the transmission of malaria from one person to another. METHODS. The candidates R0.6C and ProC6C share the 6C domain of the Plasmodium falciparum sexual-stage antigen Pfs48/45. R0.6C utilizes the glutamate-rich protein (GLURP) as a carrier, and ProC6C includes a second domain (Pfs230-Pro) and a short 36–amino acid circumsporozoite protein (CSP) sequence. Healthy adults (n = 125) from a malaria-endemic area of Burkina Faso were immunized with 3 intramuscular injections, 4 weeks apart, of 30 μg or 100 μg R0.6C or ProC6C each adsorbed to Alhydrogel (AlOH) adjuvant alone or in combination with Matrix-M (15 μg or 50 μg, respectively). The allocation was random and double-blind for this phase I trial. RESULTS. The vaccines were safe and well tolerated with no vaccine-related serious adverse events. A total of 7 adverse events, mild to moderate in intensity and considered possibly related to the study vaccines, were recorded. Vaccine-specific antibodies were highest in volunteers immunized with 100 μg ProC6C-AlOH with Matrix-M, and 13 of 20 (65%) individuals in the group showed greater than 80% transmission-reducing activity (TRA) when evaluated in the standard membrane feeding assay at 15 mg/mL IgG. In contrast, R0.6C induced sporadic TRA. CONCLUSION. All formulations were safe and well tolerated in a malaria-endemic area of Africa in healthy adults. The ProC6CAlOH/Matrix-M vaccine elicited the highest levels of functional antibodies, meriting further investigation.

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Tiono, A. B., Plieskatt, J. L., Ouedraogo, A., Soulama, B. I., Miura, K., Bougouma, E. C., … Theisen, M. (2024). A randomized first-in-human phase I trial of differentially adjuvanted Pfs48/45 malaria vaccines in Burkinabé adults. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 134(7). https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI175707

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