Key recent advances in TB vaccine development and understanding of protective immune responses against Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- PMID: 33279383
- PMCID: PMC7786643
- DOI: 10.1016/j.smim.2020.101431
Key recent advances in TB vaccine development and understanding of protective immune responses against Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Abstract
Tuberculosis is the leading infectious disease killer globally due to a single pathogen. Despite wide deployment of standard drug regimens, modern diagnostics and a vaccine (bacille Calmette Guerin, BCG), the global tuberculosis epidemic is inadequately controlled. Novel, effective vaccine(s) are a crucial element of the World Health Organization End TB Strategy. TB vaccine research and development has recently been catalysed by several factors, including a revised strategy focused first on preventing pulmonary TB in adolescents and adults who are the main source of transmission, and encouraging evaluations of novel efficacy endpoints. Renewed enthusiasm for TB vaccine research has also been stimulated by recent preclinical and clinical advancements. These include new insights into underlying protective immune responses, including potential roles for 'trained' innate immunity and Th1/Th17 CD4+ (and CD8+) T cells. The field has been further reinvigorated by two positive proof of concept efficacy trials: one evaluating a potential new use of BCG in preventing high risk populations from sustained Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection and the second evaluating a novel, adjuvanted, recombinant protein vaccine candidate (M72/AS01E) for prevention of disease in adults already infected. Fourteen additional candidates are currently in various phases of clinical evaluation and multiple approaches to next generation vaccines are in discovery and preclinical development. The two positive efficacy trials and recent studies in nonhuman primates have enabled the first opportunities to discover candidate vaccine-induced correlates of protection, an effort being undertaken by a broad research consortium.
Keywords: Adaptive immunity; Correlates of protection; Innate training; Tuberculosis (TB); Vaccine(s).
Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Mihai G. Netea – declares patent applications/registration of nanobiologics to stimulate or inhibit trained immunity, and he is a scientific founder of Trained Therapeutix and Discovery; Thomas Scriba – declares patent applications/registrations of transcriptomic and proteomic biosignatures of TB risk and disease progression and research grants to University of Cape Town from South African Medical Research Council, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, National Institutes of Health, European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership; Ann Ginsberg - none
References
-
- World Health Organization . 2020. Global Tuberculosis Report 2020. Geneva.
-
- Uplekar M., Weil D., Lonnroth K., Jaramillo E., Lienhardt C., Dias H.M. WHO’s new end TB strategy. Lancet. 2015;385(9979):1799–1801. - PubMed
-
- Weill J. [Homage to Benjamin Weill-Halle on the 40th anniversary of bcg vaccination] Presse. Med. 1964;72:2420–2421. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials
