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Soil-Transmitted Helminth Vaccines: Are We Getting Closer? | LitMetric

Soil-Transmitted Helminth Vaccines: Are We Getting Closer?

Front Immunol

Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Faculty of Biology, Medicine, and Health, School of Biological Sciences, Lydia Becker Institute of Immunology and Inflammation, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom.

Published: June 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Parasitic helminths infect over 25% of the global population, leading to serious health issues and fatalities in endemic regions, prompting a need for effective long-term solutions.
  • Despite efforts like mass drug administration (MDA), these infections are spreading, highlighting the potential of developing anthelminthic vaccines as a more sustainable control method.
  • The development of these vaccines is challenging due to the complexity of helminth life cycles, the need for identifying protective antigens, and the parasites’ ability to evade the host immune response.

Article Abstract

Parasitic helminths infect over one-fourth of the human population resulting in significant morbidity, and in some cases, death in endemic countries. Despite mass drug administration (MDA) to school-aged children and other control measures, helminth infections are spreading into new areas. Thus, there is a strong rationale for developing anthelminthic vaccines as cost-effective, long-term immunological control strategies, which, unlike MDA, are not haunted by the threat of emerging drug-resistant helminths nor limited by reinfection risk. Advances in vaccinology, immunology, and immunomics include the development of new tools that improve the safety, immunogenicity, and efficacy of vaccines; and some of these tools have been used in the development of helminth vaccines. The development of anthelminthic vaccines is fraught with difficulty. Multiple lifecycle stages exist each presenting stage-specific antigens. Further, helminth parasites are notorious for their ability to dampen down and regulate host immunity. One of the first significant challenges in developing any vaccine is identifying suitable candidate protective antigens. This review explores our current knowledge in lead antigen identification and reports on recent pre-clinical and clinical trials in the context of the soil-transmitted helminths , the hookworms and . Ultimately, a multivalent anthelminthic vaccine could become an essential tool for achieving the medium-to long-term goal of controlling, or even eliminating helminth infections.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7565266PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.576748DOI Listing

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