Search Results
Results 1 - 50 of 1348
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 >
Porter Dayna - - 2011
Mass vaccination clinic staffing models, such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Large-Scale Vaccination Clinic Output and Staff Estimates: An Example, provide guidance on appropriate roles and number of staff for successful mass vaccination clinics within local and state health departments. The Kent County Health Department used this ...
Aarntzen Erik H J G - - 2011
Current biomarkers are unable to adequately predict vaccine-induced immune protection in humans with infectious disease or cancer. However, timely and adequate assessment of antigen-specific immune responses is critical for successful vaccine development. Therefore, we have developed a method for the direct assessment of immune responses in vivo in a clinical ...
- - 2011
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved revised prescribing information and patient labeling from GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals for the monovalent rotavirus vaccine (RV1, marketed as Rotarix) and revised prescribing information and patient labeling from Merck & Co. for the pentavalent rotavirus vaccine (RV5, marketed as RotaTeq) to include history of ...
Israeli Eitan - - 2011
Macrophagic myofasciitis (MMF) is an immune-mediated condition first reported in 1998. MMF is characterized by post-vaccination systemic manifestations as well as local-stereotyped and immunologically active lesion in the site of inoculation (deltoid muscle). MMF systemic symptoms included myalgias, arthralgias, marked asthenia, muscle weakness, chronic fatigue, and fever. Recently, studies demonstrated ...
Tsai Theodore F - - 2011
A potential association between the new onset of narcolepsy accompanied by cataplexy - a putative autoimmune disorder, and vaccination with an AS03-adjuvanted A(H1N1) pandemic influenza vaccine is under investigation. We sought cases of narcolepsy from the pharmacovigilance database of a pandemic vaccine adjuvanted with another emulsion adjuvant, MF59(®), and a ...
Yoshioka Katsunobu - - 2011
We describe that case of a 61-year-old woman who developed high spiking fever, sore throat, polyarthralgia, and salmon pink evanescent rash following influenza vaccination. A diagnosis of adult-onset Still's disease (AOSD) was made based on clinical and laboratory findings. Methylprednisolone pulse therapy followed by oral prednisolone resulted in a favorable ...
Jain Siddhartha - - 2011
This study evaluated the feasibility of using γ-irradiation for preparing sterile poly(lactide-co-glycolide) (PLG) formulations for vaccines. PLG microparticles were prepared by water-in-oil-in-water double-emulsion technique and lyophilized. The vials were γ-irradiated for sterilization process. Antigens from Neisseria meningitidis were adsorbed onto the surface of the particles and were characterized for protein ...
Valenciano Marta - - 2011
A multicentre case-control study based on sentinel practitioner surveillance networks from seven European countries was undertaken to estimate the effectiveness of 2009-2010 pandemic and seasonal influenza vaccines against medically attended influenza-like illness (ILI) laboratory-confirmed as pandemic influenza A (H1N1) (pH1N1). Sentinel practitioners swabbed ILI patients using systematic sampling. We included ...
Skowronski Danuta M - - 2011
To assess the effectiveness of the pandemic influenza A/H1N1 vaccine used in Canada during autumn 2009. Test negative incident case-control study based on sentinel physician surveillance system. Community based clinics contributing to sentinel networks in British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario, and Quebec, Canada. 552 patients who presented to a sentinel site ...
Dey Antu K - - 2010
Vaccines are the most important preventive measure against infectious diseases. In developing an effective vaccine, besides the primary challenge of identifying the most relevant immunogen and efficient regime of immunization, selection of a potent adjuvant and delivery method is equally critical. The formulation of immunogens with different adjuvants may affect ...
El Ouni F - - 2010
Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis is an acute immunomediated demyelinating disorder of the central nervous system, usually encountered in children or adolescents and characterized by multifocal neurologic deficits of rapid onset. It is often preceded by various infectious diseases or vaccination, but acute disseminated encephalomyelitis developing after herpes simplex encephalitis is rare. ...
Herberts Carla - - 2010
The recent introduction of oil-in-water emulsions as adjuvants in several pandemic vaccines, such as the H1N1 vaccine, has challenged regulatory authorities to establish their safety in the general population, as well as in specific populations. Pregnant women were advised to be a target group for H1N1 vaccination owing to the ...
Jabbal-Gill Inderjit - - 2010
The current vaccine market is gaining momentum in the development of alternative administration routes namely intranasal, oral, topical, pulmonary, vaginal, and rectal; the nasal route offers the most promising opportunity for vaccine administration. It can enhance convenience, safety, elicit both local and systemic immune responses; thus potentially provide protection from ...
Canestri Ana - - 2010
Immune changes induced by the CCR5 antagonist maraviroc raise the question of an impairment of responses to vaccines. We evaluated the immunogenicity of the adjuvanted pandemic influenza A-H1N1v 2009 vaccine in HIV-1-infected patients with suppressed HIV viremia with or without a maraviroc-containing regimen. Seroprotection, seroconversion, and geometric mean titer ratio ...
Lee Jai-Wei - - 2010
Recombinant parvovirus VP2 (rVP2) was formulated with different types of adjuvant, including aluminum adjuvant and CpG oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs), and the immunological responses after vaccination in ducks were examined. In comparison with the control group, production of rVP2-specific antibodies, expression of cytokines in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) stimulated by rVP2, ...
De Koker Stefaan - - 2011
By targeting dendritic cells, polymeric carriers in the nano to lower micron range constitute very interesting tools for antigen delivery. In this critical review, we review how new immunological insights can be exploited to design new carriers allowing one to tune immune responses and to further increase vaccine potency (137 ...
Lawson L B - - 2010
The skin has been investigated as a site for vaccine delivery only since the late 1990s. However, much has been discovered about the cell populations that reside in the skin, their active role in immune responses, and the fate of transcutaneously applied antigens. Transcutaneous immunization (TCI) is a safe, effective ...
Jazani Nima Hosseini - - 2011
In the current study, we tested the efficacy of the mixture of naloxone, an opioid receptor antagonist, and alum, as a new adjuvant, in the induction of humoral and cellular immunity in response to heat-killed Salmonella typhimurium (HKST) as a model vaccine. BALB/c mice were divided into five groups. Mice ...
Baudner Barbara C - - 2010
Mucosal vaccine delivery potentially induces mucosal as well as systemic immune responses and may have advantages particularly for optimal protection against pathogens that infect the host through mucosal surfaces. However, the delivery of antigens through mucosal membranes remains a major challenge due to unfavorable physiological conditions (pH and enzymes) and ...
Barrett Brooke S - - 2010
Bacterial infections caused by Shigella flexneri, Salmonella typhimurium, and Burkholderia pseudomallei are currently difficult to prevent due to the lack of a licensed vaccine. Here we present formulation and immunogenicity studies for the three type III secretion system (TTSS) needle proteins MxiH(Δ5), PrgI(Δ5), and BsaL(Δ5) (each truncated by five residues ...
Coffman Robert L - - 2010
Adjuvants enhance immunity to vaccines and experimental antigens by a variety of mechanisms. In the past decade, many receptors and signaling pathways in the innate immune system have been defined and these innate responses strongly influence the adaptive immune response. The focus of this review is to delineate the innate ...
Chen Kang - - 2010
There are great interest and demand for the development of vaccines to prevent and treat diverse microbial infections. Mucosal vaccines elicit immune protection by stimulating the production of antibodies at mucosal surfaces and systemic districts. Being positioned in close proximity to a large community of commensal microbes, the mucosal immune ...
Tahara Yoshiro - - 2010
We have successfully achieved transcutaneous immunization without the use of any skin pre-treatment or immune-stimulant adjuvant by applying a solid-in-oil (S/O) nanodispersion: an oil-based nanodispersion of antigens coated with hydrophobic surfactant molecules. This finding indicates that the S/O nanodispersion has great promise for effective transcutaneous vaccination.
El-Kamary Samer S - - 2010
Noroviruses cause significant morbidity and mortality from acute gastroenteritis in all age groups worldwide. We conducted 2 phase 1 double-blind, controlled studies of a virus-like particle (VLP) vaccine derived from norovirus GI.1 genotype adjuvanted with monophosphoryl lipid A (MPL) and the mucoadherent chitosan. Healthy subjects 18-49 years of age were ...
Girvan Rebecca C - - 2011
Propionibacterium acnes was modified using biochemical extraction methods generating a suspension of microparticles (MIS416) comprising a minimal cell wall skeleton rich in immunostimulatory crosslinked muramyl dipeptide repeats and native bacterial DNA fragments, each which have known adjuvant activity. In vitro studies demonstrated that MIS416 was readily internalized by human myeloid ...
Velasquez Lissette S - - 2010
Norwalk virus (NV) is an enteric pathogen from the genus Norovirus and a major cause of nonbacterial gastroenteritis in humans. NV virus-like particles (VLPs) are known to elicit systemic and mucosal immune responses when delivered nasally; however, the correlates of immune protection are unknown, and codelivery with a safe and ...
Heffernan Michael J - - 2011
Vaccines based on recombinant proteins require adjuvant systems in order to generate Th1-type immune responses. We have developed a vaccine adjuvant system using a viscous chitosan solution and interleukin (IL)-12, a Th1-inducing cytokine. The chitosan solution is designed to create a depot of antigen and IL-12 at a subcutaneous injection ...
Coffey Tracey J - - 2011
Since first being described in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, the knowledge regarding Toll-like receptors (TLRs) has transformed our understanding of immunology. TLRs are a family of conserved pattern recognition receptors (PRR) that recognise specific microbial-associated molecular patterns and allow the cell to distinguish between self and non-self materials. The ...
Liang YanMei - - 2011
There is a need for developing vaccines that elicit mucosal immunity. Although oral or nasal vaccination methods would be ideal, current strategies have yielded mixed success. Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) ligands are effective adjuvants and are currently used in the Haemophilus influenzae type B vaccine. Induction of humoral immunity in ...
Cheng Huey-Chuan - - 2011
In this study, we evaluated a system for oral vaccine delivery, consisting of liposomes coated first with a layer of tremella and then with an outer layer of acid-induced alginate. In vitro release studies showed that the triple layer of alginate-tremella-liposomes was more resistant to an acidic pH and modulated the ...
Hong David K - - 2010
Influenza A virus is a negative-strand segmented RNA virus in which antigenically distinct viral subtypes are defined by the hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) major viral surface proteins. An ideal inactivated vaccine for influenza A virus would induce not only highly robust strain-specific humoral and T-cell immune responses but also ...
Nicholls Erin F - - 2010
A highly effective strategy for combating infectious diseases is to enhance host defenses using immunomodulators, either preventatively, through vaccination, or therapeutically. The effectiveness of many vaccines currently in use is due in part to adjuvants, molecules that have little immunogenicity by themselves but which help enhance and appropriately skew the ...
Jones Susan Dana - - 2010
The Fifth Annual Immunotherapeutics and Vaccine Summit (ImVacS), held in Boston, included topics covering new developments in the field of adjuvants and delivery systems for vaccines. This conference report highlights selected presentations on improving vaccine quality and persistence through adjuvants, the development of AS04-adjuvanted Cervarix, and research on new adjuvants. ...
Toporovski Roberta - - 2010
Vaccines are still one of the best approaches to manage infectious diseases. Despite the advances in drug therapies, prophylactic medicine is still more cost efficient and minimizes the burden in the heath system. Despite all the research in vaccine development, many infectious diseases are still without an effective vaccine. The ...
Jones Susan D - - 2010
The Fifth Annual Immunotherapeutics and Vaccine Summit (ImVacS), held in Boston, included topics covering new developments in the field of adjuvants and delivery systems for vaccines. This conference report highlights selected presentations on vaccines for infectious diseases, the use of adenovirus 5 (Ad5) for oral vaccination, modes of delivery for ...
Lobaina Yadira - - 2010
Chronic hepatitis B is a major health problem, with more than 350 million people infected worldwide. Available therapies have limited efficacy and require long-term continuous and expensive treatments, which often lead to the selection of resistant viral variants and rarely eliminate the virus. Immunotherapies have been investigated as a promising ...
Suzuki H - - 2010
The C-terminal fragment of Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin (C-CPE) is a claudin-4 binder. Very recently, we found that nasal immunization of mice with C-CPE-fused antigen activated antigen-specific humoral and mucosal immune responses and that the deletion of the claudin-4-binding domain attenuated the immune responses. C-CPE-fusion strategy may be useful for mucosal ...
El Sahly Hana - - 2010
Approximately 70 years passed between the licensing of alum salts as vaccine adjuvants and that of MF59™ MF59, an oil-in-water emulsion, is currently licensed for use in the elderly as an adjuvant in seasonal influenza vaccines. Its mechanism of action is not fully understood, but enhancement of the interaction between ...
Roberts Anjeanette - - 2010
The immunogenicity and efficacy of β-propiolactone (BPL) inactivated whole virion SARS-CoV (WI-SARS) vaccine was evaluated in BALB/c mice and golden Syrian hamsters. The vaccine preparation was tested with or without adjuvants. Adjuvant Systems AS01(B) and AS03(A) were selected and tested for their capacity to elicit high humoral and cellular immune ...
Kayamuro Hiroyuki - - 2010
A safe and potent adjuvant is needed for development of mucosal vaccines against etiological agents, such as influenza virus, that enter the host at mucosal surfaces. Cytokines are potential adjuvants for mucosal vaccines because they can enhance primary and memory immune responses enough to protect against some infectious agents. For ...
Gesheva Vera - - 2011
Killed viral vaccines and bacterial toxoids are weakly immunogenic. Numerous compounds are under evaluation as immunological adjuvants and peptide-carriers to improve the immune response. The hemocyanins, giant extracellular copper proteins in the blood of many mollusks, are widely used as immune stimulants. In the present study we investigated the adjuvant ...
Ridpath Julia F - - 2010
Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) infections cause respiratory, reproductive, and enteric disease in cattle. Vaccination raises herd resistance and limits the spread of BVDV among cattle. Both killed and modified live vaccines against BVDV are available. While modified live vaccines elicit an immune response with a broader range and a ...
Ralli-Jain Pooja - - 2010
Chlamydia trachomatis causes respiratory and sexually transmitted infections. Here, we tested a vaccine formulated with the recombinant major outer membrane protein from C. trachomatis mouse pneumonitis (CT-MoPn) for its ability to protect mice against an intranasal (i.n.) challenge. The adjuvants CpG and Montanide were used for systemic routes, intramuscular (i.m.) ...
Czerkinsky C - - 2010
Research has yielded an abundance of vaccine candidates against mucosal infections, but only few mucosal vaccines have been registered for human use. Extensive research is being carried out to identify new and safe adjuvants for mucosal immunization, novel delivery systems, including live vectors and reporter molecules for tissue- and cell-specific ...
Tewari Kavita - - 2010
Development of a fully effective vaccine against the pre-erythrocytic stage of malaria infection will likely require induction of both humoral and cellular immune responses. Protein based vaccines can elicit such broad-based immunity depending on the adjuvant and how the protein is formulated. Here to assess these variables, non human primates ...
Seya Tsukasa - - 2010
Immune adjuvant is an artificial pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMP) for potentiating various immune responses. Vaccine represents one event that is capable of inducing immune response caused by antigen and PAMP stimuli, which act on antigen-presenting dendritic cells (mDCs). Here, we introduce the pathways by which CTL and NK cells are ...
Chen Wangxue - - 2010
Mucosal infections and associated diseases remain a major socio-economic burden to society. Since parenteral immunizations fail to induce efficient protective immunity at mucosal surfaces, mucosal immunization is a logical approach to prevent and treat mucosally-initiated infections. All currently approved human mucosal vaccines are based on attenuated or killed whole pathogen ...
Lycke N - - 2010
The ultimate goal for vaccination is to stimulate protective immunological memory. Protection against infectious diseases not only relies on the magnitude of the humoral immune response, but more importantly on the quality and longevity of it. Adjuvants are critical components of most non-living vaccines. Although little attention has been given ...
Radosevic Katarina - - 2010
The most advanced malaria vaccine, RTS,S, is comprised of a portion of the Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite (CS) protein, fused to and admixed with the hepatitis B virus surface antigen, and an adjuvant [corrected].This vaccine confers short-term protection against malaria infection, with an efficacy of about 50%, and induces particularly B-cell ...
Gong Rui - - 2010
The present study evaluated the potential of recombinant binding region A of clumping factor A (rClfA-A) to be an effective component of a vaccine against mastitis induced by Staphylococcus aureus in the mouse. rClfA-A and inactivated S. aureus were each emulsified in Freund's adjuvant, mineral oil adjuvant, and Seppic adjuvant; ...
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 >