Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10968604 | Vaccine | 2011 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Vaxfectin® is a lipid-based adjuvant initially developed for use with plasmid DNA (pDNA) vaccines. Here we present detailed nonclinical assessments performed prior to Vaxfectin®'s first-in-man use, as an adjuvant in the H5N1 influenza vaccine VCL-IPT1. Following IM delivery to rabbits, VCL-IPT1 pDNA localized primarily to injection sites, where levels steadily declined over the 2 months examined. Risk of pDNA integration into genomic DNA was negligible. Toxicology studies in rabbits revealed mild inflammatory/immune responses at injection sites characteristic of IM vaccine delivery; Vaxfectin® directly contributed to these responses. These data support clinical development of H5N1 pDNA vaccines, and also present an encouraging profile for further development of Vaxfectin® as an adjuvant for vaccines in general.
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Authors
John Doukas, Jane Morrow, Dawn Bellinger, Thomas Hilgert, Terrie Martin, Doug Jones, Rohit Mahajan, Denis Rusalov, Sean Sullivan, Alain Rolland,