AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted to create a human challenge model for Salmonella enterica serovar Paratyphi A to evaluate vaccines for paratyphoid fever.
  • Participants were divided into two groups, with one group receiving a higher dose of the bacteria and monitored closely for symptoms and blood/stool cultures, initiating antibiotic treatment as needed.
  • The results showed a 60% infection rate in the higher dose group, with significant instances of subclinical bacteremia, indicating that this model is effective and safe for assessing vaccine efficacy related to both infection and symptom presence.

Article Abstract

Background: To expedite the evaluation of vaccines against paratyphoid fever, we aimed to develop the first human challenge model of Salmonella enterica serovar Paratyphi A infection.

Methods: Two groups of 20 participants underwent oral challenge with S. Paratyphi A following sodium bicarbonate pretreatment at 1 of 2 dose levels (group 1: 1-5 × 103 colony-forming units [CFU] and group 2: 0.5-1 × 103 CFU). Participants were monitored in an outpatient setting with daily clinical review and collection of blood and stool cultures. Antibiotic treatment was started when prespecified diagnostic criteria were met (temperature ≥38°C for ≥12 hours and/or bacteremia) or at day 14 postchallenge.

Results: The primary study objective was achieved following challenge with 1-5 × 103 CFU (group 1), which resulted in an attack rate of 12 of 20 (60%). Compared with typhoid challenge, paratyphoid was notable for high rates of subclinical bacteremia (at this dose, 11/20 [55%]). Despite limited symptoms, bacteremia persisted for up to 96 hours after antibiotic treatment (median duration of bacteremia, 53 hours [interquartile range, 24-85 hours]). Shedding of S. Paratyphi A in stool typically preceded onset of bacteremia.

Conclusions: Challenge with S. Paratyphi A at a dose of 1-5 × 103 CFU was well tolerated and associated with an acceptable safety profile. The frequency and persistence of bacteremia in the absence of clinical symptoms was notable, and markedly different from that seen in previous typhoid challenge studies. We conclude that the paratyphoid challenge model is suitable for the assessment of vaccine efficacy using endpoints that include bacteremia and/or symptomatology.

Clinical Trials Registration: NCT02100397.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5439345PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cid/cix042DOI Listing

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