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Optimising Controlled Human Malaria Infection Studies Using Cryopreserved P. falciparum Parasites Administered by Needle and Syringe
Authors:Susanne H. Sheehy  Alexandra J. Spencer  Alexander D. Douglas  B. Kim Lee Sim  Rhea J. Longley  Nick J. Edwards  Ian D. Poulton  Domtila Kimani  Andrew R. Williams  Nicholas A. Anagnostou  Rachel Roberts  Simon Kerridge  Merryn Voysey  Eric R. James  Peter F. Billingsley  Anusha Gunasekera  Alison M. Lawrie  Stephen L. Hoffman  Adrian V. S. Hill
Affiliation:1. Centre for Clinical Vaccinology and Tropical Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.; 2. The Jenner Institute Laboratories, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.; 3. Sanaria Inc., Rockville, Maryland, United States of America.; 4. Centre for Geographical Medical Research (Coast), Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kilifi, Kenya.; 5. Centre for Statistics in Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.; Aeras, United States of America,
Abstract:

Background

Controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) studies have become a routine tool to evaluate efficacy of candidate anti-malarial drugs and vaccines. To date, CHMI trials have mostly been conducted using the bite of infected mosquitoes, restricting the number of trial sites that can perform CHMI studies. Aseptic, cryopreserved P. falciparum sporozoites (PfSPZ Challenge) provide a potentially more accurate, reproducible and practical alternative, allowing a known number of sporozoites to be administered simply by injection.

Methodology

We sought to assess the infectivity of PfSPZ Challenge administered in different dosing regimens to malaria-naive healthy adults (n = 18). Six participants received 2,500 sporozoites intradermally (ID), six received 2,500 sporozoites intramuscularly (IM) and six received 25,000 sporozoites IM.

Findings

Five out of six participants receiving 2,500 sporozoites ID, 3/6 participants receiving 2,500 sporozoites IM and 6/6 participants receiving 25,000 sporozoites IM were successfully infected. The median time to diagnosis was 13.2, 17.8 and 12.7 days for 2,500 sporozoites ID, 2,500 sporozoites IM and 25,000 sporozoites IM respectively (Kaplan Meier method; p = 0.024 log rank test).

Conclusions

2,500 sporozoites ID and 25,000 sporozoites IM have similar infectivities. Given the dose response in infectivity seen with IM administration, further work should evaluate increasing doses of PfSPZ Challenge IM to identify a dosing regimen that reliably infects 100% of participants.

Trial Registration

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01465048
Keywords:
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