Protection against malaria at 1 year and immune correlates following PfSPZ vaccination.
Andrew S IshizukaKirsten E LykeAdam DeZureAndrea A BerryThomas L RichieFloreliz H MendozaMary E EnamaIngelise J GordonLee-Jah ChangUzma N SarwarKathryn L ZephirLaSonji A HolmanEric R JamesPeter F BillingsleyAnusha GunasekeraSumana ChakravartyAnita ManojMingLin LiAdam J RubenTao LiAbraham G EappenRichard E StaffordNatasha K CTooba MurshedkarHope DeCederfeltSarah H PlummerCynthia S HendelLaura NovikPamela J M CostnerJamie G SaundersMatthew B LaurensChristopher V PloweBarbara FlynnWilliam R WhalenJ P ToddJay NoorSrinivas RaoKailan Sierra-DavidsonGeoffrey M LynnJudith E EpsteinMargaret A KempGary A FahleSebastian A MikolajczakMatthew FishbaugherBrandon K SackStefan H I KappeSilas A DavidsonLindsey S GarverNiklas K BjörkströmMartha C NasonBarney S GrahamMario RoedererB Kim Lee SimStephen L HoffmanJulie E LedgerwoodRobert A SederPublished in: Nature medicine (2016)
An attenuated Plasmodium falciparum (Pf) sporozoite (SPZ) vaccine, PfSPZ Vaccine, is highly protective against controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) 3 weeks after immunization, but the durability of protection is unknown. We assessed how vaccine dosage, regimen, and route of administration affected durable protection in malaria-naive adults. After four intravenous immunizations with 2.7 × 10(5) PfSPZ, 6/11 (55%) vaccinated subjects remained without parasitemia following CHMI 21 weeks after immunization. Five non-parasitemic subjects from this dosage group underwent repeat CHMI at 59 weeks, and none developed parasitemia. Although Pf-specific serum antibody levels correlated with protection up to 21-25 weeks after immunization, antibody levels waned substantially by 59 weeks. Pf-specific T cell responses also declined in blood by 59 weeks. To determine whether T cell responses in blood reflected responses in liver, we vaccinated nonhuman primates with PfSPZ Vaccine. Pf-specific interferon-γ-producing CD8 T cells were present at ∼100-fold higher frequencies in liver than in blood. Our findings suggest that PfSPZ Vaccine conferred durable protection to malaria through long-lived tissue-resident T cells and that administration of higher doses may further enhance protection.