Ebola DNA vaccine produces immune responses in all fully vaccinated volunteers in Phase 1 trial   Vical Incorporated (Nasdaq:VICL) announced today that an Ebola vaccine  candidate administered using Vical's proprietary DNA delivery technology  was safe and well tolerated, and produced both antibody and T-cell  Ebola-specific responses in all healthy volunteers who received the full  3 doses of vaccine.  The Phase 1, randomized, placebo-controlled, dose-escalation study,  the first human trial for any Ebola vaccine, was sponsored by the  National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National  Institutes of Health (NIH), and conducted at the NIH Clinical Center.  The data were presented at the American Society for Microbiology (ASM)  2006 Biodefense Research Meeting in Washington, D.C., by Julie E.  Martin, D.O., a trial investigator and research scientist at NIAID's  Dale and Betty Bumpers Vaccine Research Center (VRC), which developed  the vaccine. The DNA vaccine used in the Phase 1 trial incorporates  genetic material encoding core and surface proteins from two strains of  Ebola. Vical has secured a nonexclusive license from the NIH to  proprietary gene sequences used in the vaccine.   
  "The high rates of immune responses at all dose levels in this  initial human Ebola vaccine study support continued development of this  vaccine and further evaluation of our technology for potential  additional biodefense and emerging disease applications," said David C.  Kaslow, M.D., Vical's Chief Scientific Officer, "particularly where  antibody responses may be protective. Our processes allow rapid  development and manufacturing of vaccines without handling potentially  dangerous pathogens."  
  The vaccine used in the Phase 1 trial vaccine included three  plasmids (closed loops of DNA), one each encoding the surface  glycoprotein (GP) from the Zaire strain of Ebola, GP from the Sudan/Gulu  strain, and the internal nucleoprotein (NP) from the Zaire strain.  Subjects received three doses of vaccine or placebo at one-month  intervals via intramuscular needleless injection. Three cohorts tested  progressively higher doses of the vaccine at 2 mg (5 subjects), 4 mg (8  subjects), or 8 mg (8 subjects – with 6 receiving the full three doses).  Each cohort included two additional subjects who received placebo  instead of active vaccine.  
  The vaccine was well tolerated, with no severe adverse reactions  to the vaccine reported at any of the doses tested. Ebola-specific  antibody responses against at least one of the encoded antigens were  detected in all vaccine recipients. GP-specific antibody and T-cell  responses were detected in all recipients who received the full three  doses at all dose levels.   |