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Featured researches published by Mark Reid.


Human Vaccines | 2010

Long term immunity to live attenuated Japanese encephalitis chimeric virus vaccine: randomized, double-blind, 5-year phase II study in healthy adults.

Peter Nasveld; Andrew Ebringer; Nathan Elmes; Sonya Bennett; Sutee Yoksan; John Aaskov; Karen McCarthy; Niranjan Kanesa-thasan; Claude Meric; Mark Reid

In a randomized, double-blind study, 202 healthy adults were randomized to receive a live, attenuated Japanese encephalitis chimeric virus vaccine (JE-CV) and placebo 28 days apart in a cross-over design. A subgroup of 98 volunteers received a JE-CV booster at month 6. Safety, immunogenicity, and persistence of antibodies to month 60 were evaluated. There were no unexpected adverse events (AEs) and the incidence of AEs between JE-CV and placebo were similar. There were three serious adverse events (SAE) and no deaths. A moderately severe case of acute viral illness commencing 39 days after placebo administration was the only SAE considered possibly related to immunization. 99% of vaccine recipients achieved a seroprotective antibody titer ≥ 10 to JE-CV 28 days following the single dose of JE-CV, and 97% were seroprotected at month 6. Kaplan Meier analysis showed that after a single dose of JE-CV, 87% of the participants who were seroprotected at month 6 were still protected at month 60. This rate was 96% among those who received a booster immunization at month 6. 95% of subjects developed a neutralizing titer ≥ 10 against at least three of the four strains of a panel of wild-type Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) strains on day 28 after immunization. At month 60, that proportion was 65% for participants who received a single dose of JE-CV and 75% for the booster group. These results suggest that JE-CV is safe, well tolerated and that a single dose provides long-lasting immunity to wild-type strains.


Human Vaccines | 2010

Concomitant or sequential administration of live attenuated japanese encephalitis chimeric virus vaccine and yellow fever 17D vaccine: Randomized double-blind phase II evaluation of safety and immunogenicity.

Peter Nasveld; Joanne Marjason; Sonya Bennett; John Aaskov; Suzanne L. Elliott; Karen McCarthy; Niranjan Kanesa-thasan; Emmanuel Feroldi; Mark Reid

A randomized, double-blind, study was conducted to evaluate the safety, tolerability and immunogenicity of a live attenuated Japanese encephalitis chimeric virus vaccine (JE-CV) co-administered with live attenuated yellow fever vaccine (YF-17D strain; Stamaril®, Sanofi Pasteur) or administered successively. Participants (n = 108) were randomized to receive: YF followed by JE-CV 30 days later, JE followed by YF 30 days later, or the co-administration of JE and YF followed or preceded by placebo 30 days later or earlier. Placebo was used in a double-dummy fashion to ensure masking. Neutralizing antibody titers against JE-CV, YF-17D and selected wild-type JE strains was determined using a 50% serum-dilution plaque reduction neutralization test. Seroconversion was defined as the appearance of a neutralizing antibody titer above the assay cut-off post-immunization when not present pre-injection at day 0, or a least a four-fold rise in neutralizing antibody titer measured before the pre-injection day 0 and later post vaccination samples. There were no serious adverse events. Most adverse events (AEs) after JE vaccination were mild to moderate in intensity, and similar to those reported following YF vaccination. Seroconversion to JE-CV was 100% and 91% in the JE/YF and YF/JE sequential vaccination groups, respectively, compared with 96% in the co-administration group. All participants seroconverted to YF vaccine and retained neutralizing titers above the assay cut-off at month six. Neutralizing antibodies against JE vaccine were detected in 82-100% of participants at month six. These results suggest that both vaccines may be successfully co-administered simultaneously or 30 days apart.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2007

Population Pharmacokinetics of Tafenoquine during Malaria Prophylaxis in Healthy Subjects

B. G. Charles; Ann K. Miller; Peter Nasveld; Mark Reid; Ivor Harris; Michael D. Edstein

ABSTRACT The population pharmacokinetics of tafenoquine were studied in Australian soldiers taking tafenoquine for malarial prophylaxis. The subjects (476 males and 14 females) received a loading dose of 200 mg tafenoquine base daily for 3 days, followed by a weekly dose of 200 mg tafenoquine for 6 months. Blood samples were collected from each subject after the last loading dose and then at weeks 4, 8, and 16. Plasma tafenoquine concentrations were determined by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Population modeling was performed with NONMEM, using a one-compartment model. Typical values of the first-order absorption rate constant (Ka), clearance (CL/F), and volume of distribution (V/F) were 0.243 h−1, 0.056 liters/h/kg, and 23.7 liters/kg, respectively. The intersubject variability (coefficient of variation) in CL/F and V/F was 18% and 22%, respectively. The interoccasion variability in CL/F was 18%, and the mean elimination half-life was 12.7 days. A positive linear association between weight and both CL/F and V/F was found, but this had insufficient impact to warrant dosage adjustments. Model robustness was assessed by a nonparametric bootstrap (200 samples). A degenerate visual predictive check indicated that the raw data mirrored the postdose concentration-time profiles simulated (n = 1,000) from the final model. Individual pharmacokinetic estimates for tafenoquine did not predict the prophylactic outcome with the drug for four subjects who relapsed with Plasmodium vivax malaria, as they had similar pharmacokinetics to those who were free of malaria infection. No obvious pattern existed between the plasma tafenoquine concentration and the pharmacokinetic parameter values for subjects with and without drug-associated moderate or severe adverse events. This validated population pharmacokinetic model satisfactorily describes the disposition and variability of tafenoquine used for long-term malaria prophylaxis in a large cohort of soldiers on military deployment.


Virology | 2004

Sustained transmission of dengue virus type 1 in the Pacific due to repeated introductions of different Asian strains.

Atchareeya A-nuegoonpipat; Alain Berlioz-Arthaud; Vincent T. K. Chow; Tim Endy; Kym Lowry; Le Quynh Mai; Truong Uyen Ninh; Alyssa T. Pyke; Mark Reid; Jean-Marc Reynes; Se-Thoe Su Yun; Hlaing Myat Thu; Sook-San Wong; Edward C. Holmes; John Aaskov


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2010

Randomized, double-blind study of the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of tafenoquine versus mefloquine for malaria prophylaxis in nonimmune subjects

Peter Nasveld; Michael D. Edstein; Mark Reid; Leonard Brennan; Ivor Harris; Scott Kitchener; Peter A. Leggat; Philip Pickford; Caron Kerr; Colin Ohrt; William Prescott


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2006

Experimental infection of Culex annulirostris, Culex gelidus, and Aedes vigilax with a yellow fever/Japanese encephalitis virus vaccine chimera (ChimeriVax-JE).

Mark Reid; Donna Mackenzie; Andrew Baron; Natalie Lehmann; Kym Lowry; John Aaskov; Farshad Guirakhoo; Thomas P. Monath


Faculty of Science and Technology; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2011

Long term immunity to live attenuated Japanese encephalitis chimeric virus vaccine : randomized, double-blind, 5-year phase II study in healthy adults.

Peter Nasveld; Andrew Ebringer; Nathan Elmes; Sonya Bennett; Sutee Yoksan; John Aaskov; Karen McCarthy; Niranjan Kanesa-thasan; Claude Meric; Mark Reid


Faculty of Science and Technology; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2010

Concomitant or sequential administration of live attenuated Japanese encephalitis chimeric virus vaccine and yellow fever 17D vaccine : randomized double-blind phase II evaluation of safety and immunogenicity

Peter Nasveld; Joanne Marjason; Sonya Bennett; John Aaskov; Suzanne L. Elliott; Karen McCarthy; Niranjan Kanesa-thasan; Emmanuel Feroldi; Mark Reid


Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2006

Experimental Infection of Culex Annulirostris, Culex Gelidus, and Aedes Vigilax With a Yellow Fever/Japanese Encephalitis Virus Vaccine Chimera (Chimerivax TM-JE)

John Aaskov; Andrew Baron; Farshad Guirakhoo; Natalie Lehmann; kim Lowry; Donna Mackenzie; Thomas P. Monath; Mark Reid


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2006

Population pharmacokinetics of tafenoquine during malaria chemosuppression in Australian soldiers

B. G. Charles; Ann K. Miller; Peter Nasveld; Mark Reid; Ivor Harris; Michael D. Edstein

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John Aaskov

Queensland University of Technology

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Peter Nasveld

University of Queensland

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Niranjan Kanesa-thasan

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Kym Lowry

Queensland University of Technology

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B. G. Charles

University of Queensland

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