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New Temperature-Stable Tuberculosis (TB) Vaccine is Safe and Effective

by Dr. Jayashree Gopinath on Mar 8 2023 11:09 PM

A clinical trial testing a freeze-dried, temperature-stable experimental tuberculosis (TB) vaccine in healthy adults found it prompted immune response and was safe.

 New Temperature-Stable Tuberculosis (TB) Vaccine is Safe and Effective
A phase 1 trial, supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) has found that a temperature-stable experimental TB vaccine in healthy adults was safe and stimulated both antibodies and responses from the cellular arm of the immune system.
This trial was the first to test a TB vaccine candidate in a temperature-stable (thermostable form), and the results are published in Nature Communications.

Developing Temperature-Stable TB Vaccine

The experimental TB vaccine called ID93+GLA-SE was developed by Christopher B Fox, Ph.D., and scientists at the Access to Advanced Health Institute (formerly the Infectious Disease Research Institute) in Seattle.

It is a recombinant subunit vaccine made from four proteins of Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacteria combined with GLA-SE, an immune-stimulating adjuvant. The freeze-dried formulation does not require refrigeration and is mixed with sterile water before injection.

The trial explored whether administering temperature-stable TB vaccines that contain both ID93 and GLA-SE in a single vial would be as effective at inducing an immune response as a regimen in which non-thermostable ID93 and liquid GLA-SE are held in two vials and combined before injection.

A single-vial presentation of a thermostable vaccine would have clear advantages in ease of storage, transport, and administration, the investigators noted. Thermostable vaccines are desirable in settings where maintaining cold or frozen vaccines for long periods can be costly and difficult.

Frozen Tuberculosis (TB) Vaccine was Safe and Well-Tolerated

The researchers conducted a clinical trial whereby 23 participants received the thermostable single-vial regimen, and 22 participants received the two-vial, non-thermostable regimen. Both vaccines were safe and well-tolerated.

However, participants of the thermostable TB vaccine had robust T-cell responses and produced higher levels of antibodies in the blood than those receiving the non-thermostable two-vial vaccine.

Limitations were noted in this small trial. Therefore, it is not possible to say whether the enhanced immune responses seen in the thermostable vaccine formulation would translate to improved protective vaccine efficacy.

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The results demonstrate a proof-of-concept that adjuvant-containing vaccines can be formulated in a freeze-dried single-vial presentation without detrimentally impacting clinical immunogenicity or safety characteristics.



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Source-Eurekalert


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