Martine Marchand
GlaxoSmithKline
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Publication
Featured researches published by Martine Marchand.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1997
José A. Stoute; Moncef Slaoui; D. Gray Heppner; Patricia Marie Momin; Kent E. Kester; Pierre Desmons; Bruce T. Wellde; Nathalie Garçon; Urszula Krzych; Martine Marchand; W. Ripley Ballou; Joe Cohen
BACKGROUND The candidate vaccines against malaria are poorly immunogenic and thus have been ineffective in preventing infection. We developed a vaccine based on the circumsporozoite protein of Plasmodium falciparum that incorporates adjuvants selected to enhance the immune response. METHODS The antigen consists of a hybrid in which the circumsporozoite protein fused to hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) is expressed together with unfused HBsAg. We evaluated three formulations of this antigen in an unblinded trial in 46 subjects who had never been exposed to malaria. RESULTS Two of the vaccine formulations were highly immunogenic. Four subjects had adverse systemic reactions that may have resulted from the intensity of the immune response after the second dose, which led us to reduce the third dose. Twenty-two vaccinated subjects and six unimmunized controls underwent a challenge consisting of bites from mosquitoes infected with P. falciparum. Malaria developed in all six control subjects, seven of eight subjects who received vaccine 1, and five of seven subjects who received vaccine 2. In contrast, only one of seven subjects who received vaccine 3 became infected (relative risk of infection, 0.14; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.02 to 0.88; P<0.005). CONCLUSIONS A recombinant vaccine based on fusion of the circumsporozoite protein and HBsAg plus a potent adjuvant can protect against experimental challenge with P. falciparum sporozoites. After additional studies of protective immunity and the vaccination schedule, field trials are indicated for this new vaccine against P. falciparum malaria.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Clarisse Lorin; Yannick Vanloubbeeck; Sébastien Baudart; Michaël Ska; Babak Bayat; Geoffroy Brauers; Géraldine Clarinval; Marie-Noëlle Donner; Martine Marchand; Marguerite Koutsoukos; Pascal Mettens; Joe Cohen; Gerald Voss
HIV-1-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes are important for HIV-1 replication control. F4/AS01 consists of F4 recombinant fusion protein (containing clade B Gag/p24, Pol/RT, Nef and Gag/p17) formulated in AS01 Adjuvant System, and was shown to induce F4-specific polyfunctional CD4+ T-cell responses in humans. While replication-incompetent recombinant HIV-1/SIV antigen-expressing human adenoviral vectors can elicit high-frequency antigen-specific CD8+ T-cell responses, their use is hampered by widespread pre-existing immunity to human serotypes. Non-human adenovirus serotypes associated with lower prevalence may offer an alternative strategy. We evaluated the immunogenicity of AdC7-GRN (‘A’), a recombinant chimpanzee adenovirus type 7 vector expressing clade B Gag, RT and Nef, and F4/AS01 (‘P’), when delivered intramuscularly in homologous (PP or AA) and heterologous (AAPP or PPAA) prime-boost regimens, in macaques and mice. Vaccine-induced HIV-1-antigen-specific T cells in peripheral blood (macaques), liver, spleen, and intestinal and genital mucosa (mice) were characterized by intracellular cytokine staining. Vaccine-specific IgG antibodies (macaques) were detected using ELISA. In macaques, only the heterologous prime-boost regimens induced polyfunctional, persistent and balanced CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses specific to each HIV-1 vaccine antigen. AdC7-GRN priming increased the polyfunctionality of F4/AS01-induced CD4+ T cells. Approximately 50% of AdC7-GRN-induced memory CD8+ T cells exhibited an effector-memory phenotype. HIV-1-specific antibodies were detected with each regimen. In mice, antigen-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses were detected in the mucosal and systemic anatomical compartments assessed. When administered in heterologous prime-boost regimens, AdC7-GRN and F4/AS01 candidate vaccines acted complementarily in inducing potent and persistent peripheral blood HIV-1-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses and antibodies in macaques. Besides, adenoviral vector priming modulated the cytokine-expression profile of the protein-induced CD4+ T cells. Each regimen induced HIV-1-specific T-cell responses in systemic/local tissues in mice. This suggests that prime-boost regimens combining adjuvanted protein and low-seroprevalent chimpanzee adenoviral vectors represent an attractive vaccination strategy for clinical evaluation.
Archive | 2005
Helge Abrecht; Martine Delchambre; Martine Marchand; Nathalie Louise Mathy; Philippe Jean Gervais Ghislain Permanne; Gerald Hermann Voss
Archive | 2007
Joseph D Cohen; Martine Marchand; Christian F. Ockenhouse; Anjali Yadava
Archive | 2013
Guy Jean Marie Fernand Pierre Baudoux; Normand Blais; Martine Marchand
Archive | 2014
Mathieu Boxus; Guy Jean Marie Fernand Pierre Baudoux; Brigitte Desiree Alberte Colau; Martine Marchand
Archive | 2009
Joseph D Cohen; Martine Marchand; Christian F. Ockenhouse; Anjali Yadava
Archive | 2007
Joseph D Cohen; Martine Marchand; Christian F. Ockenhouse; Anjali Yadava
Archive | 2006
Brenda Barth; Ajay Bhatia; Mark R. Alderson; Jean-François Maisonneuve; Yves Lobet; Florence Bernadette Nozay; Martine Marchand; Pascal Mettens; Yasir A. W. Skeiky; Peter Probst
Archive | 2006
Mark R. Alderson; Brenda Barth; Ajay Bhatia; Yves Lobet; Jean-François Maisonneuve; Martine Marchand; Pascal Mettens; Florence Bernadette Nozay; Peter Probst; Yasir A. W. Skeiky
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Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine
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