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Dive into the research topics where Mardi Reymann is active.

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Featured researches published by Mardi Reymann.


Vaccine | 1997

A murine model of intranasal immunization to assess the immunogenicity of attenuated Salmonella typhi live vector vaccines in stimulating serum antibody responses to expressed foreign antigens

James E. Galen; Oscar G. Gómez-Duarte; Genevieve Losonsky; Jane L. Halpern; Carol S. Lauderbaugh; Shevon Kaintuck; Mardi Reymann; Myron M. Levine

The lack of a practical small animal model to study the immunogenicity of Salmonella typhi-based live vector vaccines expressing foreign antigens has seriously impeded the vaccine development process. For some foreign antigens, stimulation of serum IgG antibody is the desired, protective immune response. We administered to mice, by orogastric or intranasal (i.n.) routes, attenuated delta aroC delta aroD S. typhi CVD 908 carrying a plasmid encoding fragment C (fragC) of tetanus toxin fused to the eukaryotic cell receptor binding domain of diphtheria toxin (fragC-bDt), and monitored serum antibody. While orogastric inoculation of three doses was not immunogenic, i.n. immunization elicited high titers of serum IgG tetanus antitoxin, generating peak ELISA geometric mean titers (GMT) of 27024 and 35658 with 10(8) and 10(9) c.f.u. dosages, respectively; 10(9) c.f.u. i.n. of an delta aroA S. typhimurium live vector stimulated a peak antitoxin GMT of 376 405. Mice immunized with the S. typhi live vector were 100% protected against challenge with 100 50% lethal doses of tetanus toxin that rapidly killed all control mice. Intranasal immunization with two doses of S. typhi expressing unfused fragment C under control of an anaerobically-activated promoter derived from nirB stimulated significantly higher titers of serum neutralizing antitoxin than fused fragC-bDt controlled by the same promoter (GMT 0.10 AU ml-1 vs 0.01 AU ml-1, P = 0.0095). Two i.n. doses of S typhi encoding fragC under control of powerful constitutive promoter 1pp led to significantly higher peak serum neutralizing antitoxin titers than the otherwise identical construct utilizing the nirB promoter (peak GMT 0.72 AU ml-1 vs 0.10 AU ml-1, P = 0.022). The i.n. route of inoculation of mice may constitute a practical breakthrough that could expedite the development of some S. typhi-based live vector vaccines by allowing, for the first time, quantitative measurement of serum antibody responses to candidate constructs following i.n. mucosal immunization.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2013

Safety and immunogenicity of a single oral dose of recombinant double mutant heat-labile toxin derived from enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli

Samer S. El-Kamary; Mitchell B. Cohen; A. Louis Bourgeois; Lillian Van De Verg; Nicole Bauers; Mardi Reymann; Marcela F. Pasetti; Wilbur H. Chen

ABSTRACT Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) is a primary cause of travelers diarrhea for which there is no licensed vaccine. This phase 1 trial determined the safety and immunogenicity of a recombinantly produced double mutant heat-labile enterotoxin (dmLT) of ETEC. It was administered as a single oral dose of dmLT in escalating doses of 5 μg, 25 μg, 50 μg, and 100 μg, followed by a 72-h inpatient observation, outpatient visits at 8, 14, and 28 days, and telephone calls at 2 and 6 months postvaccination. Safety was assessed by frequency of adverse events, and immune responses determined after immunization included dmLT-specific serum IgA and IgG, fecal IgA, antibody-secreting cells (ASC), and antibodies in lymphocyte supernatant (ALS) responses. All doses were well tolerated by the 36 healthy adults enrolled. Immune responses were limited in the 5- and 25-μg dose recipients. The 50-μg dose recipients trended toward stronger responses than the 100-μg dose recipients by serum IgA (67% versus 33%, P = 0.22), serum IgG (58% versus 33%, P = 0.41), and fecal IgA (58% versus 33%, P = 0.41). By day 14 postvaccination, there were significantly more positive responders (≥4-fold increase from baseline) among the 50- versus 100-μg dose recipients for serum IgA (P = 0.036) but not serum IgG (P = 0.21). In conclusion, a single oral dose of dmLT was well tolerated and immunogenic, with immune responses plateauing at the 50-μg dose. (This clinical trial is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov, registration number NCT01147445.)


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2014

Helicobacter pylori Infection Affects Immune Responses Following Vaccination of Typhoid-Naive US Adults With Attenuated Salmonella Typhi Oral Vaccine CVD 908-htrA

Khitam Muhsen; Marcela F. Pasetti; Mardi Reymann; David Y. Graham; Myron M. Levine

BACKGROUND  We examined the association between Helicobacter pylori infection and the immune response following oral immunization of US adults with attenuated Salmonella Typhi vaccine CVD 908-htrA. METHODS  Baseline sera from 74 volunteers without a history of typhoid fever who were immunized orally with CVD 908-htrA were tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for immunoglobin G (IgG) antibodies to H. pylori, hepatitis A antibodies (a marker of low socioeconomic status and exposure to enteric infections), and pepsinogen (PG) I and II levels (measures of gastric inflammation). IgG against S. Typhi lipopolysaccharide (LPS) O and flagella was measured before and 28 days following immunization; a ≥4-fold increase in titer from baseline constituted seroconversion. RESULTS  Seroconversion of S. Typhi IgG LPS antibodies was significantly higher among vaccinees infected with H. pylori versus uninfected subjects: adjusted odds ratio (OR) 3.8, 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.1-12.6 (P = .03). A low PG I:PG II ratio (<5), indicating more advanced corpus gastritis, increased the odds of seroconversion of IgG S. Typhi flagella antibody (adjusted OR 6.4, 95% CI, 1.3-31.4; P = .02). Hepatitis A infection did not influence the immune response to CVD 908-htrA. CONCLUSIONS  H. pylori infection and gastric inflammation may enhance humoral immunity to oral attenuated S. Typhi vaccine.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2016

Safety and Immunogenicity of a Parenterally Administered, Structure-Based Rationally Modified Recombinant Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B Protein Vaccine, STEBVax

Wilbur H. Chen; Marcela F. Pasetti; Rajan P. Adhikari; Holly Baughman; Robin Douglas; Jill El-Khorazaty; Nancy Greenberg; Frederick W. Holtsberg; Grant C. Liao; Mardi Reymann; Xiaolin Wang; Kelly L. Warfield; M. Javad Aman

ABSTRACT Staphylococcus aureus produces several enterotoxins and superantigens, exposure to which can elicit profound toxic shock. A recombinant staphylococcal enterotoxin B (rSEB) containing 3 distinct mutations in the major histocompatibility complex class II binding site was combined with an alum adjuvant (Alhydrogel) and used as a potential parenteral vaccine named STEBVax. Consenting healthy adult volunteers (age range, 23 to 38 years) participated in a first-in-human open-label dose escalation study of parenteral doses of STEBVax ranging from 0.01 μg up to 20 μg. Safety was assessed by determination of the frequency of adverse events and reactogenicity. Immune responses to the vaccination were determined by measurement of anti-staphylococcal enterotoxin B (anti-SEB) IgG by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and a toxin neutralization assay (TNA). Twenty-eight participants were enrolled in 7 dosing cohorts. All doses were well tolerated. The participants exhibited heterogeneous baseline antibody titers. More seroconversions and a faster onset of serum anti-SEB IgG toxin-neutralizing antibodies were observed by TNA with increasing doses of STEBVax. There was a trend for a plateau in antibody responses with doses of STEBVax of between 2.5 and 20 μg. Among the participants vaccinated with 2.5 μg to 20 μg of STEBVax, ∼93% seroconverted for SEB toxin-neutralizing antibody. A strong correlation between individual SEB-specific serum IgG antibody titers and the neutralization of gamma interferon production was found in vitro. STEBvax appeared to be safe and immunogenic, inducing functional toxin-neutralizing antibodies. These data support its continued clinical development. (This study has been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under registration no. NCT00974935.)


PLOS ONE | 2014

Age-Dependent Association among Helicobacter pylori Infection, Serum Pepsinogen Levels and Immune Response of Children to Live Oral Cholera Vaccine CVD 103-HgR

Khitam Muhsen; Rosanna Lagos; Mardi Reymann; David Y. Graham; Marcela F. Pasetti; Myron M. Levine

Background Through its effects on gastric secretion, we hypothesized that Helicobacter pylori infection may influence oral immunization. Accordingly, we examined the association between H. pylori infection, serum pepsinogen (PG) (measures for H. pylori gastritis) and vibriocidal antibody (a correlate of protection) seroconversion following oral immunization with CVD 103-HgR live cholera vaccine among children of different ages. Methods Sera from 422 Chilean children who were vaccinated with a single dose of CVD 103-HgR were tested by ELISA for serum IgG antibodies to H. pylori, PG I and PG II levels and antibodies to Shigella flexneri 2a lipopolysaccharide and hepatitis A virus (as markers of low socioeconomic status and exposure to enteric pathogens). Results The likelihood of vibriocidal antibody seroconversion following vaccination with CVD 103-HgR was significantly decreased in H. pylori-seropositive children age 6 months to 4 years with PG II>8 µg/L (adjusted OR 0.14 (95% CI 0.03–0.61; P = 0.009), and also in H. pylori seropositives with lower PG II level (adjusted OR 0.34, 95% CI 0.14–0.83; P = 0.017), compared to H. pylori-seronegatives. H. pylori-seropositive children aged 5–9 years with serum PG I>30 µg/L (indicating more severe gastritis) had higher odds of vibriocidal seroconversion than those with lower PG I levels (adjusted OR 4.41, 95%CI 1.26–15.38; P = 0.02). There was no significant association between exposures to S. flexneri 2a or hepatitis A virus and vibriocidal seroconversion. Conclusions As H. pylori gastritis progresses with increasing pediatric age in developing country venues, changes in gastric secretion ensue that we believe explain the observed differences in age-related immune responses to immunization with live oral cholera vaccine. The effect of H. pylori and changes of gastric acid secretion on the immunogenicity of various oral vaccines should be studied in different developing, transitional and industrialized country settings.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Immunization Coverage Surveys and Linked Biomarker Serosurveys in Three Regions in Ethiopia

Mark A. Travassos; Berhane Beyene; Zenaw Adam; James D. Campbell; Nigisti Mulholland; Seydou Diarra; Tassew Kassa; Lisa Oot; Jenny Sequeira; Mardi Reymann; William C. Blackwelder; Yukun Wu; Inna Ruslanova; Jaya Goswami; Samba O. Sow; Marcela F. Pasetti; Robert Steinglass; Amha Kebede; Myron M. Levine

Objective Demographic and health surveys, immunization coverage surveys and administrative data often divergently estimate vaccination coverage, which hinders pinpointing districts where immunization services require strengthening. We assayed vaccination coverage in three regions in Ethiopia by coverage surveys and linked serosurveys. Methods Households with children aged 12–23 (N = 300) or 6–8 months (N = 100) in each of three districts (woredas) were randomly selected for immunization coverage surveys (inspection of vaccination cards and immunization clinic records and maternal recall) and linked serosurveys. IgG-ELISA serologic biomarkers included tetanus antitoxin ≥ 0.15 IU/ml in toddlers (receipt of tetanus toxoid) and Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) anti-capsular titers ≥ 1.0 mcg/ml in infants (timely receipt of Hib vaccine). Findings Coverage surveys enrolled 1,181 children across three woredas; 1,023 (87%) also enrolled in linked serosurveys. Administrative data over-estimated coverage compared to surveys, while maternal recall was unreliable. Serologic biomarkers documented a hierarchy among the districts. Biomarker measurement in infants provided insight on timeliness of vaccination not deducible from toddler results. Conclusion Neither administrative projections, vaccination card or EPI register inspections, nor parental recall, substitute for objective serological biomarker measurement. Including infants in serosurveys informs on vaccination timeliness.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2015

Strategies for Coordination of a Serosurvey in Parallel with an Immunization Coverage Survey

Mark A. Travassos; Berhane Beyene; Zenaw Adam; James D. Campbell; Nigisti Mulholland; Seydou Diarra; Tassew Kassa; Lisa Oot; Jenny Sequeira; Mardi Reymann; William C. Blackwelder; Marcela F. Pasetti; Samba O. Sow; Robert Steinglass; Amha Kebede; Myron M. Levine

A community-based immunization coverage survey is the standard way to estimate effective vaccination delivery to a target population in a region. Accompanying serosurveys can provide objective measures of protective immunity against vaccine-preventable diseases but pose considerable challenges with respect to specimen collection and preservation and community compliance. We performed serosurveys coupled to immunization coverage surveys in three administrative districts (woredas) in rural Ethiopia. Critical to the success of this effort were serosurvey equipment and supplies, team composition, and tight coordination with the coverage survey. Application of these techniques to future studies may foster more widespread use of serosurveys to derive more objective assessments of vaccine-derived seroprotection and monitor and compare the performance of immunization services in different districts of a country.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2017

Bioactive Immune Components of Anti-Diarrheagenic Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli Hyperimmune Bovine Colostrum Products

Khandra T. Sears; Sharon M. Tennant; Mardi Reymann; Raphael Simon; Nicky Konstantopoulos; William C. Blackwelder; Eileen M. Barry; Marcela F. Pasetti

ABSTRACT Diarrhea is a common illness among travelers to resource-limited countries, the most prevalent attributable agent being enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC). At this time, there are no vaccines licensed specifically for the prevention of ETEC-induced travelers diarrhea (TD), and this has propelled investigation of alternative preventive methods. Colostrum, the first milk expressed after birthing, is rich in immunoglobulins and innate immune components for protection of newborns against infectious agents. Hyperimmune bovine colostrum (HBC) produced by immunization of cows during gestation (and containing high levels of specific antibodies) is a practical and effective prophylactic tool against gastrointestinal illnesses. A commercial HBC product, Travelan, is available for prevention of ETEC-induced diarrhea. Despite its demonstrated clinical efficacy, the underlying immune components and antimicrobial activity that contribute to protection remain undefined. We investigated innate and adaptive immune components of several commercial HBC products formulated to reduce the risk of ETEC-induced diarrhea, including Travelan and IMM-124E, a newer product that has broader gastrointestinal health benefits. The immune components measured included total and ETEC-specific IgG, total IgA, cytokines, growth factors, and lactoferrin. HBC products contained high levels of IgG specific for multiple ETEC antigens, including O-polysaccharide 78 and colonization factor antigen I (CFA/I) present in the administered vaccines. Antimicrobial activity was measured in vitro using novel functional assays. HBC greatly reduced ETEC motility in soft agar and exhibited bactericidal activity in the presence of complement. We have identified immune components and antimicrobial activity potentially involved in the prevention of ETEC infection by HBC in vivo.


Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2018

Safety and immunogenicity of a pentavalent meningococcal conjugate vaccine containing serogroups A, C, Y, W, and X in healthy adults: a phase 1, single-centre, double-blind, randomised, controlled study

Wilbur H. Chen; Kathleen M. Neuzil; C Rebecca Boyce; Marcela F. Pasetti; Mardi Reymann; Lionel Martellet; Nancy Hosken; F. Marc LaForce; Rajeev M. Dhere; Sambhaji Shankar Pisal; Amol Chaudhari; Prasad S. Kulkarni; Ray Borrow; Helen Findlow; Valerie Brown; Megan L McDonough; Len Dally; Mark Alderson

BACKGROUND Invasive meningococcal disease is an important public health problem, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. After introduction of MenAfriVac in 2010, Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A disease has been almost eliminated from the region. However, serogroups C, W, Y, and X continue to cause disease outbreaks. We assessed the NmCV-5 pentavalent meningococcal conjugate vaccine targeting A, C, Y, W, and X serogroups in a first-in-man, phase 1 study. METHODS We did a single-centre, double-blind, randomised controlled trial at a research clinic in Baltimore (MD, USA). Participants were healthy adults aged 18-45 years with no history of meningococcal vaccination or previous meningococcal infection. We randomly assigned participants (1:1:1) by an SAS-generated random schedule to a single, 0·5 mL, intramuscular injection of aluminium-phosphate adjuvanted NmCV-5, non-adjuvanted NmCV-5, or control (the quadrivalent meningococcal conjugate vaccine Menactra). The randomisation sequence used a permuted block design with randomly chosen block sizes of three and six. The vaccines were prepared, labelled, and administered with procedures to ensure participants and study personnel remained masked to treatment. After vaccination, participants were observed in the clinic for 60 min for adverse reactions. Participants recorded daily temperature and injection site or systemic reactions at home and returned to the clinic for follow-up visits on days 7, 28, and 84 for safety assessments; blood samples were also collected on day 7 for safety laboratory assessment. A phone call contact was made 6 months after vaccination. Serum was collected before vaccination and 28 days after vaccination for immunological assessment with a rabbit complement-dependent serum bactericidal antibody (rSBA) assay. The primary objective was an intention-to-treat assessment of safety, measuring local and systemic reactogenicity over 7 days, unsolicited adverse events through 28 days, and serious adverse events over 6 months. The secondary objective for the assessment of immunogenicity, was a per-protocol analysis of rSBA before and 28 days after vaccination. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02810340. FINDINGS Between Aug 17, 2016, and Feb 16, 2017, we assigned 20 participants to each vaccine. All vaccines were well-tolerated. Pain was the most common local reaction, occurring in 12 (60%), ten (50%), and seven (35%) participants in the adjuvanted NmCV-5, non-adjuvanted NmCV-5, and control groups, respectively. Headache was the most common systemic reaction, occurring in five (25%), three (15%), and three (15%), respectively. Most solicited reactogenicity adverse reactions were mild (60 [74%] of 81) and all were self-limiting. None of the differences in proportions of individuals with each solicited reaction was significant (p>0·300 for all comparisons) between the three vaccination groups. There were no serious adverse events and 19 unsolicited non-serious adverse events in 14 (23%) participants. Both adjuvanted and non-adjuvanted NmCV-5 elicited high rSBA titres against all five meningococcal serogroups. The pre-vaccination geometric mean titres (GMTs) ranged from 3·36 to 53·80 for the control, from 6·28 to 187·00 for the adjuvanted vaccine, and from 4·29 to 350·00 for the non-adjuvanted vaccine, and the post-vaccination GMT ranged from 3·14 to 3214 for the control, from 1351 to 8192 for the adjuvanted vaccine, and from 1607 to 11 191 for the non-adjuvanted vaccine. Predicted seroprotective responses (ie, an increase in rSBA titres of eight times or more) for the adjuvanted and non-adjuvanted NmCV-5 were similar to control responses for all five serogroups. INTERPRETATION The adjuvanted and non-adjuvanted NmCV-5 vaccines were well tolerated and did not produce concerning adverse effects and resulted in immune responses that are predicted to confer protection against all five targeted serogroups of invasive meningococcal disease. Further clinical testing of NmCV-5 is ongoing, and additional clinical trials are necessary to confirm the safety and immunogenicity of NmCV-5 in target populations. FUNDING UK Department for International Development.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2017

Randomized, Placebo-Controlled, Double-Blind Phase 2 Trial Comparing the Reactogenicity and Immunogenicity of a Single Standard Dose to Those of a High Dose of CVD 103-HgR Live Attenuated Oral Cholera Vaccine, with Shanchol Inactivated Oral Vaccine as an Open-Label Immunologic Comparator

Samba O. Sow; Milagritos D. Tapia; Wilbur H. Chen; Fadima Cheick Haidara; Karen L. Kotloff; Marcela F. Pasetti; William C. Blackwelder; Awa Traoré; Boubou Tamboura; Moussa Doumbia; Fatoumata Diallo; Flanon Coulibaly; Uma Onwuchekwa; Mamoudou Kodio; Sharon M. Tennant; Mardi Reymann; Diana F. Lam; Marc Gurwith; Michael Lock; Thomas Yonker; Jonathan M. Smith; Jakub K. Simon; Myron M. Levine

ABSTRACT Reactive immunization with a single-dose cholera vaccine that could rapidly (within days) protect immunologically naive individuals during virgin soil epidemics, when cholera reaches immunologically naive populations that have not experienced cholera for decades, would facilitate cholera control. One dose of attenuated Vibrio cholerae O1 classical Inaba vaccine CVD 103-HgR (Vaxchora) containing ≥2 × 108 CFU induces vibriocidal antibody seroconversion (a correlate of protection) in >90% of U.S. adults. A previous CVD 103-HgR commercial formulation required ≥2 × 109 CFU to elicit high levels of seroconversion in populations in developing countries. We compared the vibriocidal responses of Malians (individuals 18 to 45 years old) randomized to ingest a single ≥2 × 108-CFU standard dose (n = 50) or a ≥2 × 109-CFU high dose (n = 50) of PaxVax CVD 103-HgR with buffer or two doses (n = 50) of Shanchol inactivated cholera vaccine (the immunologic comparator). To maintain blinding, participants were dosed twice 2 weeks apart; CVD 103-HgR recipients ingested placebo 2 weeks before or after ingesting vaccine. Seroconversion (a ≥4-fold vibriocidal titer rise) between the baseline and 14 days after CVD 103-HgR ingestion and following the first and second doses of Shanchol were the main outcomes measured. By day 14 postvaccination, the rates of seroconversion after ingestion of a single standard dose and a high dose of CVD 103-HgR were 71.7% (33/46 participants) and 83.3% (40/48 participants), respectively. The rate of seroconversion following the first dose of Shanchol, 56.0% (28/50 participants), was significantly lower than that following the high dose of CVD 103-HgR (P = 0.003). The vibriocidal geometric mean titer (GMT) of the high dose of CVD 103-HgR exceeded the GMT of the standard dose at day 14 (214 versus 95, P = 0.045) and was ∼2-fold higher than the GMT on day 7 and day 14 following the first Shanchol dose (P > 0.05). High-dose CVD 103-HgR is recommended for accelerated evaluation in developing countries to assess its efficacy and practicality in field situations. (This study has been registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under registration no. NCT02145377.)

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A. Louis Bourgeois

Naval Medical Research Center

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Mitchell B. Cohen

Boston Children's Hospital

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