The first chlamydia vaccine has passed a major test

The first chlamydia vaccine has passed a major test

Admin on 28 / 09 / 2019 under Research News

The result offers hope for stemming the tens of millions of new infections each year


The first vaccine against chlamydia has passed its first test in humans.

 

About three dozen healthy women were randomly assigned one of two versions of a chlamydia vaccine or a placebo treatment in a clinical trial. Both vaccine versions were shown to be safe, and both produced an immune response not seen in the placebo group, researchers report online August 12 in the Lancet Infectious Diseases.

 

“These promising results provide encouragement,” says pediatric infectious disease specialist Toni Darville of the University of North Carolina School of Medicine in Chapel Hill, who coauthored a commentary accompanying the study. Chlamydia can lead to disabling, long-term complications for women, so a vaccine against the disease could have a big effect on public health, she says.

 

Chlamydia, caused by the bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis, is one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases, with around 131 million women and men newly infected worldwide each year. In the United States, it’s the most frequently reported sexually transmitted infection caused by bacteria, with at least 1.7 million cases in 2017, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But those numbers could be low, researchers say, as infections can go unreported: The disease can produce general symptoms that may not be recognized as chlamydia, such as genital discharge or pain or no symptoms at all.


Antibiotics can clear a chlamydia infection from the body. But left untreated, the disease can wreak reproductive havoc on women. An infection targets the cervix, and, for about 1 in 6 women, spreads to the uterus and fallopian tubes where it can cause pelvic inflammatory disease and infertility.

 

“The percentage of women who develop these long-term complications is relatively low,” Darville says. But the high number of infections overall, she says, means that “a significant number of women” go on to have chronic pelvic pain or infertility, or both.

Developing a vaccine that protects against C. trachomatis is challenging, however, because the bacteria live a complex life within the human body. During an infection, the microbes make their way inside cells that line the reproductive organs. Based on studies in animals, researchers expect that a successful vaccine needs to provoke a strong immune response in two key ways: with antibodies, to fight the bacteria outside of cells, and with immune system proteins and cells, such as T cells, that help to clear bacteria from within infected cells.

 

In the clinical trial, immunologist and vaccine researcher Robin Shattock of Imperial College London and colleagues tested two versions of a chlamydia vaccine. Both versions triggered an immune response, via antibodies and T cells, but one formulation performed better than the other. Further testing will proceed with that version. The next step will be to see if the vaccine prevents infection compared with a placebo, and would involve volunteers who are at risk of infection, Shattock says.

 

If the vaccine passes the next clinical tests and is approved for use, the ideal age to vaccinate girls and boys would be around 11 or 12, roughly the same as for the human papillomavirus, or HPV, vaccine (SN Online: 4/28/17). “We are cautiously optimistic,” Shattock says. “A vaccine against chlamydia is an important unmet need.”


From source: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/first-chlamydia-vaccine-has-passed-major-test

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recently Published Articles
International Journal of Water Technology and Treatment Methods

International Journal of ...

International Journal of Water Technology and Treatment Methods also provide the state of the art

Annals of Physical Medicine and Physiotherapy

Annals of Physical Medici...

Annals of Physical Medicine and Physiotherapy is an open access, peer reviewed, scholarly journal

Bulletin of Proteomics & Bioinformatics

Bulletin of Proteomics & ...

Bulletin of Proteomics & Bioinformatics publishes the highest quality scientific articles

Current Trends In Medical And Clinical Case Reports (ISSN:2769-7088)

Current Trends In Medical...

Current Trends In Medical And Clinical Case Reports is an open access monthly journal publishing Ca

International Journal of Methods and Protocols

International Journal of ...

International Journal of Methods and Protocols primary research papers presenting or using new or

Multidisciplinary Research and Reviews

Multidisciplinary Researc...

Multidisciplinary Research and Reviews is an international, peer reviewed, open access, scien

Clinical Biostatistics and Biometrics

Clinical Biostatistics an...

Clinical Biostatistics And Biometrics OA is an international, peer reviewed, open access journal o

Bulletin of Chemical Engineering

Bulletin of Chemical Engi...

Bulletin Of Chemical Engineering publishes a broad-based journal found on two key tenets: To publi

Indexing Partners

image-missing
image-missing
image-missing
image-missing
image-missing
image-missing
image-missing
image-missing
image-missing
image-missing
image-missing
image-missing
image-missing
image-missing
image-missing