Scientific News Health care Surgery INHALED TUBERCULOSIS VACCINE MORE EFFECTIVE THAN TRADITIONAL SHOT
INHALED TUBERCULOSIS VACCINE MORE EFFECTIVE THAN TRADITIONAL SHOT
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- A novel aerosol version of
the most common tuberculosis (TB) vaccine, administered directly to the lungs as
an oral mist, offers significantly better protection against the disease in
experimental animals than a comparable dose of the traditional injected vaccine,
researchers report this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences.
The aerosol vaccine -- under development through
a collaboration between Harvard University and the international not-for-profit
Medicine in Need (MEND) -- could provide a low-cost, needle-free TB treatment
that is highly stable at room temperature.
"Rising rates of tuberculosis and
drug-resistant disease in developing countries have amply illustrated the need
for more effective vaccines," says David Edwards, the Gordon McKay
Professor of the Practice of Biomedical Engineering in Harvard's School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences. "While most new TB vaccines continue to
call for needle injection, our vaccine could provide safer, more consistent
protection by eliminating these injections and the need for refrigerated storage.
We see great promise for this new treatment."
Says Barry R. Bloom, dean of the Harvard School
of Public Health: "Tuberculosis is one of the most resistant and
challenging diseases to protect against, and the successful results of aerosol
delivery using nanoparticle technology offers a potentially new platform for
immunization. Were the animal results here confirmed in human studies, this
technology could be used not only for TB vaccines, but those protecting against
other infectious diseases as well."
The current PNAS paper by Edwards, Bloom, and
colleagues at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, the Aeras Global TB
Vaccine Foundation, MEND South Africa, the Harvard School of Public Health and
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, and Manta is based on studies
involving guinea pigs, a species of rodent highly sensitive to TB.
Among guinea pigs vaccinated with the aerosol
treatment and subsequently exposed to TB, less than 1 percent of lung and spleen
tissue showed effects of the disease. By contrast, in animals treated with the
same dose of the traditional injected vaccine, some 5 percent of lung tissue and
10 percent of spleen tissue showed symptoms following TB exposure.
Administered to 100 million infants annually, the
current Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccine for TB is the world's most
widely administered childhood vaccine. Dried into a powder by freezing and
delivered by needle injection, the vaccine requires refrigerated storage and has
shown variable degrees of protection against tuberculosis in different parts of
the world. These limitations have prompted calls from public health experts and
physicians for alternative treatments.
The rapid-drying process by which the aerosol
vaccine is made resembles the technique used in the manufacture of powdered milk.
In the aerosol vaccine, particles form at micrometer and nanometer scales and in
spherical and elongated shapes, a combination that appears to improve dispersal
in the mouth.
While commonly used with food, cosmetics, and
pharmaceuticals, this spray drying of small and large molecules is seldom used
for drying cellular material. The new technique enables TB vaccines, and
potentially other bacterial and viral-based vaccines, to sidestep the
traditional problems associated with keeping vaccines chilled.
"Spray drying is lower-cost than BCG, easily
scalable for manufacturing, and ideal for needle-free use, such as via
inhalation," says Edwards, an international leader in aerosol drug and
vaccine delivery. "Its greater stability at room temperature could
ultimately provide a better means of creating and delivering vaccine throughout
the world."
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Contact: Steve Bradt
steve_bradt@harvard.edu
617-496-8070
Harvard University
Publishing date: March 24, 2008
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