Safety, tolerability and viral kinetics during SARS-CoV-2 human challenge in young adults
- PMID: 35361992
- DOI: 10.1038/s41591-022-01780-9
Safety, tolerability and viral kinetics during SARS-CoV-2 human challenge in young adults
Abstract
Since its emergence in 2019, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has caused hundreds of millions of cases and continues to circulate globally. To establish a novel SARS-CoV-2 human challenge model that enables controlled investigation of pathogenesis, correlates of protection and efficacy testing of forthcoming interventions, 36 volunteers aged 18-29 years without evidence of previous infection or vaccination were inoculated with 10 TCID50 of a wild-type virus (SARS-CoV-2/human/GBR/484861/2020) intranasally in an open-label, non-randomized study (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT04865237 ; funder, UK Vaccine Taskforce). After inoculation, participants were housed in a high-containment quarantine unit, with 24-hour close medical monitoring and full access to higher-level clinical care. The study's primary objective was to identify an inoculum dose that induced well-tolerated infection in more than 50% of participants, with secondary objectives to assess virus and symptom kinetics during infection. All pre-specified primary and secondary objectives were met. Two participants were excluded from the per-protocol analysis owing to seroconversion between screening and inoculation, identified post hoc. Eighteen (~53%) participants became infected, with viral load (VL) rising steeply and peaking at ~5 days after inoculation. Virus was first detected in the throat but rose to significantly higher levels in the nose, peaking at ~8.87 log10 copies per milliliter (median, 95% confidence interval (8.41, 9.53)). Viable virus was recoverable from the nose up to ~10 days after inoculation, on average. There were no serious adverse events. Mild-to-moderate symptoms were reported by 16 (89%) infected participants, beginning 2-4 days after inoculation, whereas two (11%) participants remained asymptomatic (no reportable symptoms). Anosmia or dysosmia developed more slowly in 15 (83%) participants. No quantitative correlation was noted between VL and symptoms, with high VLs present even in asymptomatic infection. All infected individuals developed serum spike-specific IgG and neutralizing antibodies. Results from lateral flow tests were strongly associated with viable virus, and modeling showed that twice-weekly rapid antigen tests could diagnose infection before 70-80% of viable virus had been generated. Thus, with detailed characterization and safety analysis of this first SARS-CoV-2 human challenge study in young adults, viral kinetics over the course of primary infection with SARS-CoV-2 were established, with implications for public health recommendations and strategies to affect SARS-CoV-2 transmission. Future studies will identify the immune factors associated with protection in those participants who did not develop infection or symptoms and define the effect of prior immunity and viral variation on clinical outcome.
© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.
Comment in
-
Understanding COVID-19 through human challenge models.Nat Med. 2022 May;28(5):903-904. doi: 10.1038/s41591-022-01778-3. Nat Med. 2022. PMID: 35361993 No abstract available.
-
A new day for human challenge trials?Trends Mol Med. 2022 Jul;28(7):531-532. doi: 10.1016/j.molmed.2022.05.002. Epub 2022 May 22. Trends Mol Med. 2022. PMID: 35610124 Free PMC article.
References
-
- Fischerii, W. A. et al. A phase 2a clinical trial of molnupiravir in patients with COVID-19 shows accelerated SARS-CoV-2 RNA clearance and elimination of infectious virus. Sci. Transl. Med. 14, eabl7430 (2022). - DOI
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Associated data
Grants and funding
- MC_PC_19059/MRC_/Medical Research Council/United Kingdom
- NIHR201385/DH_/Department of Health/United Kingdom
- NIHR-BRC-1215-20008/DH_/Department of Health/United Kingdom
- MC_PC_19025/MRC_/Medical Research Council/United Kingdom
- MR/V028448/1/MRC_/Medical Research Council/United Kingdom
- MR/R015600/1/MRC_/Medical Research Council/United Kingdom
- 200907/DH_/Department of Health/United Kingdom
- 200927 /DH_/Department of Health/United Kingdom
- NF-SI-0617-10010/DH_/Department of Health/United Kingdom
- CO-CIN-01/DH_/Department of Health/United Kingdom
- IS-BRC-1215-20004/DH_/Department of Health/United Kingdom
- C18616/A25153/CRUK_/Cancer Research UK/United Kingdom
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical
Miscellaneous