Experimental vaccines
against measles in a world of changing epidemiology
[Invited review]
Mike M. Pütz, Fabienne B. Bouche, Rik L. de Swart and
Claude P. Muller
Vaccination with the current live attenuated measles
vaccine is one of the most successful and cost-effective
medical interventions. However, as a result of
persisting maternal antibodies and immaturity of the... International Journal for Parasitology, 2003,
33:5-6:525-545
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Manuscript received 22 July 2002 Revised 28
January 2003 Accepted 3 February 2003;
Abstract
Vaccination with the current live attenuated measles vaccine is one of
the most successful and cost-effective
medical interventions. However, as a result
of persisting maternal antibodies and
immaturity of the infant immune system, this
vaccine is poorly immunogenic in children
<9 months old. Immunity against the live
vaccine is less robust than natural immunity
and protection less durable. There may also
be some concern about (vaccine) virus spread
during the final stage of an eventual
measles eradication program. Opinions may
differ with respect to the potential threat
that some of these concerns may be to the
World Health Organisation goal of measles
elimination, but there is a consensus that
the development of new measles vaccines
cannot wait. Candidate vaccines are based on
viral or bacterial vectors expressing
recombinant viral proteins, naked DNA,
immune stimulating complexes or synthetic
peptides mimicking neutralising epitopes.
While some of these candidate vaccines have
proven their efficacy in monkey studies,
aerosol formulated live attenuated measles
vaccine are evaluated in clinical trials.
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