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Featured researches published by Alois B. Lang.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2000

Safety and immunogenicity of intranasally administered inactivated trivalent virosome-formulated influenza vaccine containing Escherichia coli heat-labile toxin as a mucosal adjuvant.

Reinhard Glück; Robert Mischler; Peter Durrer; Emil Fürer; Alois B. Lang; Christian Herzog; Stanley J. Cryz

A trivalent influenza virosome vaccine containing hemagglutinin and Escherichia coli heat-labile toxin (HLT) was administered intranasally to young adults and elderly subjects. Symptoms that followed immunization were mild and transient. A significant increase in serum hemagglutination inhibition (HI) antibody was noted for the 3 vaccine strains. There was no significant difference in postimmunization geometric mean titers or seroconversion rates between age groups. The percentage of subjects attaining protective HI titers (>/=40%) was comparable in both groups for the A/Bayern (P=.5) and B/Beijing (P=.3) strains but was higher among young adults (92.2%) versus elderly subjects (76.5%; P=.057) for the A/Wuhan strain. The proportion of subjects with nonprotective baseline titers who attained protective levels after immunization was similar in both age groups for the A/Bayern and B/Beijing components. For the A/Wuhan component, significantly (P=.017) more young adults achieved protective titers versus elderly subjects (85. 7% and 53.8%, respectively). Vaccination evoked a significant (P<. 005) increase in anti-HLT antibody titers.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2004

VACCINATION OF CYSTIC FIBROSIS PATIENTS AGAINST PSEUDOMONAS AERUGINOSA REDUCES THE PROPORTION OF PATIENTS INFECTED AND DELAYS TIME TO INFECTION

Alois B. Lang; Anna Rüdeberg; Martin H Schöni; John U. Que; Emil Fürer; Urs B. Schaad

Introduction: Cystic fibrosis (CF) almost always leads to chronic airway infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Despite advances in antibiotic therapy, after chronic infection rapid deterioration in lung function occurs, increasing morbidity and mortality. Prevention of infection by vaccination is desirable, but earlier trials produced disappointing results. The promising short term immunogenicity and safety of a new P. aeruginosa vaccine prompted us to evaluate its long term efficacy. We conducted a 10-year retrospective analysis of outcomes in a group of vaccinated patients. Materials and Methods: In 1989–1990, 30 young children with CF, mean age 7 years, with no prior history of infection with P. aeruginosa, were vaccinated against P. aeruginosa with a polyvalent conjugate vaccine. We report the follow-up of 26 of these patients from 1989 to 2001. The patients were given yearly vaccine boosters. Comparisons were made with a CF patient control group matched for gender, age and, where possible, genetic mutation. Vaccinated patients and controls were attending a single CF clinic and received the same clinical management throughout the study period. Main outcomes were time to infection, proportion of patients infected, development of P. aeruginosa mucoid phenotype, lung function and body weight. Results: The time to infection with P. aeruginosa was longer in the vaccination group than in the control group, and fewer vaccinated patients than controls became chronically infected (32% versus 72%; P < 0.001). The proportion of mucoid infections was higher in the control group (44%) than in the vaccinated group (25%). Patients ≥18 years of age at the end of the study had a lower mean forced expiratory volume at 1 s (FEV1) than did those 13–17 years of age, but this difference was small in the vaccinated group (73.6% versus 83.7%) compared with the controls (48.0% versus 78.7%). In the ≥18 year age category the mean FEV1% at 10 years was 73.6% (vaccinated) and 48.0% (controls) (P < 0.05). In the vaccinated group only 11 (44%) of 25 patients were underweight at the 10-year follow-up compared with 18 (72%) of 25 at the beginning of the study. In the control group 17 (68%) of 25 patients were underweight at 10-year follow-up compared with 16 (64%) of 25 at the beginning of the study. Conclusion: Regular vaccination of young CF patients for a period of 10 years with a polyvalent conjugate vaccine reduced the frequency of chronic infection with P. aeruginosa. This was associated with better preservation of lung function. Vaccinated patients gained more weight during the study period, a possible indication of an improved overall health status.


Vaccine | 2003

Experience with registered mucosal vaccines

Guido Dietrich; Monika Griot-Wenk; Ian C. Metcalfe; Alois B. Lang; Jean-François Viret

Most pathogens gain access to their host through mucosal surfaces. It is therefore desirable to develop vaccination strategies that lead to mucosal immune responses. Ideally, a vaccine should be administered mucosally in order to elicit mucosal protection. Several attenuated live viral and bacterial pathogens are registered as oral vaccines for human use, including the oral polio vaccine (Sabin) as well as attenuated strains of Salmonella typhi and Vibrio cholerae. These attenuated bacterial live vaccines-S. typhi Ty21a as well as V. cholerae CVD 103-HgR-are employed as vaccines against typhoid and cholera, respectively. In this manuscript, we review the immune responses that are induced by these vaccines, with a focus on mucosal immunity.


Vaccine | 2003

Mucosal antibody response induced with a nasal virosome-based influenza vaccine

P Durrer; U Glück; C Spyr; Alois B. Lang; R Zurbriggen; Christian Herzog; Reinhard Glück

A vaccination against influenza that elicits both a systemic antibody and a mucosal IgA response would improve on the protective efficacy of currently available vaccines. Previous studies have shown the safety and efficacy of virosomes as delivery systems in vaccination. This study was a controlled, randomised, double-blind, single centre, phase II trial assessing an intranasal virosome vaccine, adjuvanted with heat-labile toxin (HLT) from enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli, versus an intranasal without HLT and comparing it open to an intramuscular vaccine in a total of 88 healthy adults. The development of a new technique enabled for the first time the detection of neutralising IgA antibodies in very dilute nasal wash samples. It was demonstrated that intranasally administered inactivated influenza vaccine, adjuvanted with HLT, not only elicits a spectrum of humoral and cell-mediated responses in healthy adults, critical for the protection and recovery from influenza virus infection, but is also highly effective in eliciting IgA neutralising antibodies at the mucosa. Intranasal virosome-formulated, HLT-adjuvanted, influenza vaccine was effective and well tolerated in this study. Its potential to offer a high level of mucosal protection, not provided by conventional parenteral vaccination, could play a significant role in preventing morbidity and mortality associated with influenza.


Vaccine | 1998

Safety and characterization of the immune response engendered by two combined measles, mumps and rubella vaccines.

Simone Schwarzer; Susanne Reibel; Alois B. Lang; Mark Michael Struck; Beatriz Finkel; Edith Gerike; Annedore Tischer; Markus Gassner; Reinhard Glück; Burghard Stück; Stanley J. Cryz

We performed a randomized trial to compare the safety and immunogenicity of two combined measles, mumps and rubella vaccines in healthy children 14-24 months of age. Triviraten Berna Vaccine (Swiss Serum and Vaccine Institute), contains the Edmonston Zagreb 19 strain of measles virus, the Rubini mumps virus strain and the Wistar RA 27/3 rubella strain while MMR-Vax (Merck, Sharp & Dohme, West Point, PA) contains the Enders attenuated Edmonston measles strain, the Jeryl Lynn mumps strain and the Wistar RA 27/3 rubella strain. Immunization with Triviraten Berna was associated with a significantly lower incidence of swelling and redness at the injection site in addition to a reduced rate of fever compared with MMR-Vax. Seroconversion rates for the measles and rubella vaccine components were comparable in all tests used. However, seroconversion for the mumps vaccine component was test-dependent. Using an ELISA, the seroconversion rate following immunization with MMR-Vax was significantly (P < 0.01) higher than for Triviraten Berna. In contrast, nearly identical rates were obtained using an indirect immunofluorescence test. Both vaccines were equally effective at engendering antibodies capable of neutralizing wild type mumps virus. Geometric mean ELISA antibody titers against measles and mumps virus were higher following immunization with MMR-Vax while that for rubella was higher after immunization with Triviraten Berna. A small number (N = 13) of adolescents immunized either with MMR-Vax or Triviraten Berna were reimmunized with Triviraten Berna and various humoral and cellular response parameters to the measles and mumps vaccine components analyzed. While few subjects mounted a humoral antibody response to measles, most likely due to elevated baseline titers, there was a marked lymphoproliferative response. Anti-mumps virus ELISA antibody titers were higher both at baseline and after reimmunization in subjects who received MMR-Vax for primary immunization. However, there was no difference in either neutralizing titer or proliferative response in subjects primed with MMR-Vax or Triviraten Berna either before or after reimmunization.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1995

Effect of high-affinity anti-Pseudomonas aeruginosa lipopolysaccharide antibodies induced by immunization on the rate of Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection in patients with cystic fibrosis

Alois B. Lang; Urs B. Schaad; Anna Rüdeberg; Joanna Wedgwood; John U. Que; Emil Fürer; Stanley J. Cryz

Patients with cystic fibrosis (CF; N = 26) and with no prior history of infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa were immunized with an octavalent O-polysaccharide-toxin A conjugate vaccine. During the next 4 years, 16 patients (61.5%) remained free of infection and 10 (38.5%) became infected. Total serum antilipopolysaccharide (LPS) antibody levels induced by immunization were comparable in infected and noninfected patients. In contrast, 12 of 16 noninfected versus 3 of 10 infected patients (p = 0.024) mounted and maintained a high-affinity anti-LPS antibody response. When compared retrospectively with the rate in a group of age- and gender-matched, nonimmunized, noncolonized patients with CF, the rate at which P. aeruginosa infections were acquired was significantly lower (p < or = 0.02) among all immunized versus nonimmunized patients during the first 2 years of observation. Subsequently, only those immunized patients who maintained a high-affinity anti-LPS antibody response had a significant reduction (p < or = 0.014) in the rate of infection during years 3 and 4. Smooth, typeable strains of P. aeruginosa predominated among immunized patients; rough, nontypeable strains were most frequently isolated from nonimmunized patients. Mucoid variants were isolated from one immunized patient versus six nonimmunized patients. These results indicate that the induction of a high-affinity P. aeruginosa anti-LPS antibody response can influence the rate of infection in patients with CF.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2010

Preclinical In Vitro and In Vivo Characterization of the Fully Human Monoclonal IgM Antibody KBPA101 Specific for Pseudomonas aeruginosa Serotype IATS-O11

Michael P. Horn; Adrian Zuercher; Martin A. Imboden; Michael P. Rudolf; Hedvika Lazar; Hong Wu; Niels Høiby; Stefanie Fas; Alois B. Lang

ABSTRACT Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection in ventilator-associated pneumonia is a serious and often life-threatening complication in intensive care unit patients, and new treatment options are needed. We used B-cell-enriched peripheral blood lymphocytes from a volunteer immunized with a P. aeruginosa O-polysaccharide-toxin A conjugate vaccine to generate human hybridoma cell lines producing monoclonal antibodies specific for individual P. aeruginosa lipopolysaccharide serotypes. The fully human monoclonal antibody secreted by one of these lines, KBPA101, is an IgM/κ antibody that binds P. aeruginosa of International Antigenic Typing System (IATS) serotype O11 with high avidity (5.81 × 107 M−1 ± 2.8 × 107 M−1) without cross-reacting with other serotypes. KBPA101 specifically opsonized the P. aeruginosa of IATS O11 serotype and mediated complement-dependent phagocytosis in vitro by the human monocyte-like cell line HL-60 at a very low concentration (half-maximal phagocytosis at 0.16 ng/ml). In vivo evaluation of KBPA101 demonstrated a dose-response relationship for protection against systemic infections in a murine burn wound sepsis model, where 70 to 100% of animals were protected against lethal challenges with P. aeruginosa at doses as low as 5 μg/animal. Furthermore, a high efficacy of KBPA101 in protection from local respiratory infections in an acute lung infection model in mice was demonstrated. Preclinical toxicology evaluation on human tissue, in rabbits, and in mice did not indicate any toxicity of KBPA101. Based on these preclinical findings, the first human clinical trials have been initiated.


European Journal of Immunology | 2004

B cells alter the phenotype and function of follicular-homing CXCR5+ T cells.

Lisa M. Ebert; Michael P. Horn; Alois B. Lang; Bernhard Moser

The CXC chemokine receptor (CXCR)5 is rapidly induced on activated CD4+ T cells, allowing migration toward secondary lymphoid tissue follicles, where the CXCR5 ligand CXCL13/BCA‐1 is produced. Such CXCR5+ T cells provide efficient help for B cell immunoglobulin production and are termed follicular B helper T (TFH) cells. However, the molecular mechanisms by which TFH cells provide B cell help are unknown. Here, we demonstrate that newly generated (antigen‐primed) TFH cells express a phenotype consistent with induction of B cell proliferation, but co‐culture with primed B cells resulted in a switch to a plasma cell‐inducing phenotype, characterized by loss of CD154, induction of CD70 and an increase in IL‐10 production capacity. The ability to produce IL‐10 could be maintained as a stable phenotype, but its secretion was strictly dependent on inducible costimulator (ICOS) signaling. Furthermore, B cells preserved a lymph node migration phenotype in proliferating TFH cells by preventing the loss of CC chemokine receptor (CCR)7 and the induction of CCR5. Thus, B cells directly modulate the B cell helper phenotype in TFH cells and actively promote their prolonged co‐localization with these cells.


Molecular Microbiology | 1993

Molecular cloning and characterization of the genetic determinants that express the complete Shigella serotype D (Shigella sonnei) lipopolysaccharide in heterologous live attenuated vaccine strains

Jean-François Viret; Stanley J. Cryz; Alois B. Lang; Didier Favre

The genetic determinants for the complete Shigella sonnei lipopolysaccharide (LPS) have been cloned, characterized by restriction mapping, and expressed in heterologous genetic backgrounds, including Salmonella typhi and Vibrio cholerae live attenuated vaccine strains. The rfb/rfc locus encoding the polymerized serotype‐specific O polysaccharide was mapped within 23 kb of DNA isolated from S. sonnei virulence plasmid pWR105. A highly similar chromosomal DNA sequence was identified by Southern hybridization analysis in Plesiomonas shigelloides known to have the same O serotype specificity as S. sonnei. Expression studies of the rfb/rfc locus have shown that S. sonnei. O polysaccharide is covalently bound to LPS cores of both the K‐12 and RI types, but neither to Salmonella (Ra‐type) nor to V. cholerae O1 cores. In order to express a compatible core structure in the latter organisms, chromosomal rfa loci encoding R1‐type LPS were isolated from both an Escherichia coli R1 strain (rfaR1) and from S. sonnei (rfdsonnei). Restriction mapping and functional analysis of cloned DNA allowed us to localize the rfaR1 locus and to orient it with respect to the neighbouring cysE chromosomal marker. A high degree of sequence similarity was found at the DNA level between rfa loci of enterobacterial species characterized by Ri‐type LPS. Co‐expression studies involving S. sonnei rfb/rfc and rfa loci propagated on compatible plasmids have shown that, at most, 13 to 14 kb of r/api DNA are required for the expression of complete phase‐l‐like S. sonnei LPS in E. coli K‐12 and S. typhi, whereas an adjacent region of about 3.5 kb is needed in the more stringent host, V. cholerae, S. sonnei O antigen expressed in a V. eholerae recombinant vaccine strain is present on the cell surface in a form suitable for the induction of a specific antibody response in vaccinated rabbits.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009

Pharmacokinetics and Safety Profile of the Human Anti-Pseudomonas aeruginosa Serotype O11 Immunoglobulin M Monoclonal Antibody KBPA-101 in Healthy Volunteers

Hedvika Lazar; Michael P. Horn; Adrian Zuercher; Martin A. Imboden; Peter Durrer; Michael Seiberling; Rolf Pokorny; Christophe Hammer; Alois B. Lang

ABSTRACT KBPA-101 is a human monoclonal antibody of the immunoglobulin M isotype, which is directed against the O-polysaccharide moiety of Pseudomonas aeruginosa serotype O11. This double-blind, dose escalation study evaluated the safety and pharmacokinetics of KBPA-101 in 32 healthy volunteers aged 19 to 46 years. Each subject received a single intravenous infusion of KBPA-101 at a dose of 0.1, 0.4, 1.2, or 4 mg/kg of body weight or placebo infused over 2 h. Plasma samples for pharmacokinetic assessments were taken before infusion as well as 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 2.5, 4, 6, 8, 12, 24, 36, and 48 h and 4, 7, 10, and 14 days after start of dosing. Plasma concentrations of KBPA-101 were detected with mean maximum concentrations of drug in plasma of 1,877, 7,571, 24,923, and 83,197 ng/ml following doses of 0.1, 0.4, 1.2, and 4.0 mg/kg body weight, respectively. The mean elimination half-life was between 70 and 95 h. The mean volume of distribution was between 4.76 and 5.47 liters. Clearance ranged between 0.039 and 0.120 liters/h. At the highest dose of 4.0 mg/kg, plasma KBPA-101 levels were greater than 5,000 ng/ml for 14 days. KBPA-101 exhibited linear kinetics across all doses. No anti-KBPA-101 antibodies were detected after dosing in any subject. Overall, the human monoclonal antibody KBPA-101 was well tolerated over the entire dose range in healthy volunteers, and no serious adverse events have been reported.

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Urs B. Schaad

Boston Children's Hospital

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