Michel Cadoz
Sanofi Pasteur
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Featured researches published by Michel Cadoz.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1987
Iswar L. Acharya; Charles U. Lowe; Rita Thapa; Vijay L. Gurubacharya; M.B. Shrestha; Michel Cadoz; Dominique Schulz; Jacques Armand; Dolores A. Bryla; Birger Trollfors; Tod Cramton; Rachel Schneerson; John B. Robbins
We conducted a pilot study followed by a large clinical trial in Nepal of the use of the capsular polysaccharide of Salmonella typhi (Vi) as a vaccine to prevent typhoid fever. In the pilot study, involving 274 Nepalese, there were no significant side effects of the Vi vaccine; about 75 percent responded with a rise in serum antibodies of fourfold or more. In the clinical trial, residents of five villages were given intramuscular injections of either Vi or, as a control, pneumococcus vaccine dispensed in coded, randomly arranged, single-dose syringes. There were 6907 participants, of whom 6438 were members of the target population (5 to 44 years of age); each was visited every two days. Those with temperatures of 37.8 degrees C or higher for three consecutive days were examined and asked to give blood for culture. Typhoid was diagnosed as either blood culture-positive or clinically suspected on the basis of bradycardia, splenomegaly, and fever, with a negative blood culture. Seventeen months after vaccination, the codes were broken for the 71 patients meeting the criteria for either culture-positive or clinically suspected typhoid. The attack rate of typhoid was 16.2 per 1000 among the controls and 4.1 per 1000 among those immunized with Vi (P less than 0.00001). The efficacy of Vi was 72 percent in the culture-positive cases, 80 percent in the clinically suspected cases, and 75 percent in the two groups combined. These data provide evidence that Vi antibodies confer protection against typhoid. Surveillance continues to determine the duration of Vi-induced immunity.
Vaccine | 1997
Marie-Pierre Preziosi; A. Yam; Coumba Toure Kane; Laurence Chabirand; Isabelle Iteman; Gary Sanden; Souleymane Mboup; Agnes Hoffenbach; Kim Knudsen; Nicole Guiso; Steven G. F. Wassilak; Michel Cadoz
A randomized, double-blind trial comparing a diphtheria-tetanus-acellular pertussis vaccine (DTaP) (pertussis toxoid and filamentous hemagglutinin) with a whole-cell vaccine (DTwP) was conducted. A case-contact study was nested in the trial to estimate absolute efficacy. From 1990 through 1994, 4181 children were randomized to receive one of the vaccines at 2, 4, and 6 months. Severe adverse events were monitored weekly during two visits after vaccination. Fewer serious adverse events were observed after DTaP. Surveillance for cough illnesses persisting more than 7 days, in children under 15 years of age, was made by weekly home visits. Examining physicians, blind to vaccination status, took samples for culture and serologic testing. Pertussis was defined as 21 or more days of cough confirmed by culture, serology, or contact with a culture-confirmed person. Beginning 28 days after the third vaccine dose, the overall ratio of pertussis incidence in the DTaP group relative to the DTwP group (RRac/wc) was 1.54 (95% CI, 1.23-1.93). In children younger than 18 months of age, RRac/wc was 1.16 (95% CI, 0.77-1.73) and 1.76 (95% CI, 1.33-2.33) in children older than 18 months, which suggests a shorter duration of protection with the acellular vaccine (P = 0.090). Absolute efficacy estimates derived from the case-contact study confirmed the lower protection afforded by the acellular vaccine compared with the whole-cell vaccine: 31% (95% CI, 7-49) versus 55% against the protocol case definition, and 85% (95% CI, 66-93) versus 96% for the more severe WHO case definition. Although vaccination with DTaP provided a lower degree of protection than the highly effective DTwP, this difference was less prominent before 18 months of age, the customary age for a fourth dose. The safer DTaP vaccine may prove a valuable substitute for whole-cell vaccines when used in a schedule that includes a booster-dose.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2001
Klara Berencsi; Zsofia Gyulai; Eva Gönczöl; Steve Pincus; William I. Cox; Susan Michelson; Laszlo Kari; Claude Meric; Michel Cadoz; John Zahradnik; Stuart E. Starr; Stanley Plotkin
The major matrix phosphoprotein 65 (pp65) of cytomegalovirus (CMV) is an important target of HLA-restricted cytotoxic T cells (CTL) after natural infection. A canarypox-CMV pp65 recombinant was studied for its ability to induce CMV pp65-specific CTL, helper T lymphocytes, and antibodies in a phase I clinical trial. Twenty-one CMV-seronegative adult volunteers were randomized to receive immunizations at months 0, 1, 3, and 6 with either canarypox-CMV pp65 or placebo. In canarypox-CMV pp65-immunized subjects, pp65-specific CTL were elicited after only 2 vaccinations and were present at months 12 and 26 in all subjects tested. Cell-depletion studies indicated that the CTL were phenotype CD8(+). Peripheral blood mononuclear cells proliferated in response to stimulation with purified pp65, and antibodies specific for pp65 also were detected. Canarypox-CMV pp65 is the first recombinant vaccine to elicit CMV-specific CTL responses, which suggests the potential usefulness of this approach in preventing disease caused by CMV.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1999
Stuart P. Adler; Stanley A. Plotkin; Eva Gönczöl; Michel Cadoz; Claude Meric; Jian Ben Wang; Pierre Dellamonica; Al M. Best; John M. Zahradnik; Steve Pincus; Klara Berencsi; William I. Cox; Zsofia Gyulai
To develop a vaccine against cytomegalovirus (CMV), a canarypox virus (ALVAC) expressing CMV glycoprotein (gB) was evaluated alone or in combination with a live, attenuated CMV vaccine (Towne). Three doses of 106.5 TCID50 of ALVAC-CMV(gB) induced very low neutralizing or ELISA antibodies in most seronegative adults. However, to determine whether ALVAC-CMV(gB) could prime for antibody responses, 20 seronegative adults randomly received either 106.8 TCID50 of ALVAC-CMV(gB) or 106.8 TCID50 of ALVAC-RG, expressing the rabies glycoprotein, administered at 0 and 1 month, with all subjects receiving a dose of 103.5 pfu of the Towne vaccine at 90 days. For subjects primed with ALVAC-CMV(gB), neutralizing titers and ELISA antibodies to CMV(gB) developed sooner, were much higher, and persisted longer than for subjects primed with ALVAC-RG. All vaccines were well tolerated. These results demonstrate that ALVAC-CMV(gB) primes the immune system and suggest a combined-vaccine strategy to induce potentially protective levels of neutralizing antibodies.
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 1991
Catterine Ferreccio; John D. Clemens; Alfredo Avendano; Isidoro Horwitz; C. Flores; L. Avila; Marisol Cayazzo; Bernard Fritzell; Michel Cadoz; Myron Levine
The safety and immunogenicity of a vaccine against Haemophilus influenzae type b consisting of purified polyribosylribitolphosphate conjugated to tetanus toxoid (PRP-T) was evaluated in 278 Chilean infants who were randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups: Group A, PRP-T mixed with diphtheria-tetanus toxoids-pertussis (DTP) vaccine in a single syringe and given as a single inoculation in one arm and placebo in the other arm; Group B, PRP-T given in one arm and DTP in the other arm; Group C, DTP given in one arm and placebo in the other. Infants were immunized at 2, 4 and 6 months of age and examined daily for 4 days after each immunization; serum PRP antibodies were measured at baseline and 2 months after each dose. The only adverse systemic reaction attributable to PRP-T beyond that caused by DTP alone was a 7 to 20% increase in febrile responses in the first 24 hours after the first and second doses of vaccine; the fevers were largely low grade and not accompanied by increased irritability, diminished activity or loss of appetite, compared with the group who received DTP without PRP-T. After the first dose 72% of infants who received PRP-T combined with DTP and 67% who received it in a separate arm attained antibody concentrations greater than or equal to 0.15 micrograms/ml. After two doses of PRP-T, 93 and 95%, respectively, had concentrations greater than or equal to 0.15 microgram/ml and after three doses 100% of infants who received PRP-T had such titers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Infection and Immunity | 2001
Bachra Rokbi; Delphine Seguin; Bruno Guy; Véronique Mazarin; Emmanuel Vidor; François Mion; Michel Cadoz; Marie-José Quentin-Millet
ABSTRACT Despite increasing knowledge on the biology of Helicobacter pylori, little is known about the expression pattern of its genome during infection. While mouse models of infection have been widely used for the screening of protective antigens, the reliability of the mouse model for gene expression analysis has not been assessed. In an attempt to address this question, we have developed a quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) that allowed the detection of minute amounts of mRNA within the gastric mucosa. The expression of four genes, 16S rRNA, ureA (encoding urease A subunit), katA (catalase), and alpA (an adhesin), was monitored during the course of a 6-month infection of mice and in biopsy samples from of 15 infected humans. We found that the selected genes were all expressed within both mouse and human infected mucosae. Moreover, the relative abundance of transcripts was the same (16S rRNA > ureA >katA > alpA), in the two models. Finally, results obtained with the mouse model suggest a negative effect of bacterial burden on the number of transcripts of each gene expressed per CFU (P < 0.05 for 16S rRNA, alpA, andkatA). Overall, this study demonstrates that real-time RT-PCR is a powerful tool for the detection and quantification ofH. pylori gene expression within the gastric mucosa and strongly indicates that mice experimentally infected with H. pylori provide a valuable model for the analysis of bacterial gene expression during infection.
Vaccine | 1998
Michel Cadoz
Of infections caused by encapsulated bacteria, those due to Haemophilus influenzae b (Hib) are among the most restricted to infancy and require very early immunisation. Hib capsular polysaccharide (CPS) has the most typical T-cell independent profile. The absence of efficacy of this vaccine in infants triggered development of conjugate vaccines which are so effective that there is now no room for plain polysaccharide Hib vaccines. Pneumococcal infections pose similar problems to Hib, but are more complex. The immunogenicity of the different pneumococcal serotypes varies considerably in infancy. Although the current CPS vaccine provides limited protection in infancy, the burden of pneumococcal infection is so high that its use could be reconsidered should conjugate vaccines be available later than expected. Meningococcal infections are less a specific problem for infants. Again, serogroup immunogenicity varies widely. Group B meningococcal CPS is not immunogenic even in adults, Group C behaves as Hib CPS, whereas Group A is immunogenic as early as 6 months of age. Group A CPS may prove of interest for an infant vaccine, especially in epidemic situations. Typhoid fever is uncommon in infancy; Vi CPS is poorly immunogenic in infancy and is, therefore, of limited interest for use as an infant vaccine.
Vaccine | 2002
Stavros Sougioultzis; Cynthia K. Lee; Mazen Alsahli; Subhas Banerjee; Michel Cadoz; Robert Schrader; Bruno Guy; Philip Bedford; Thomas P. Monath; Ciaran P. Kelly; Pierre Michetti
Low dose E. coli heat-labile enterotoxin (LT), delivered orally or enterically, has been used as an adjuvant for Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) urease in healthy adults. In this study we aim to test the safety and adjuvant efficacy of LT delivered rectally together with recombinant H. pylori urease. Eighteen healthy adults without present or past H. pylori infection were enrolled in a double blind, randomized, ascending dose study to receive either urease (60 mg), or urease (60 mg) + LT (5 or 25 microg). The immunization preparation was administered per rectum on days 0, 14 and 28. Serum, stool and saliva anti-urease and anti-LT IgG and IgA antibodies (Abs) were measured and urease-specific and LT-specific antigen secreting cells (ASCs) were counted in peripheral blood at baseline and 7 (ASC counts) or 14 days (antibody levels) after each dosing. Peripheral blood lymphoproliferation assays were also performed at baseline and at the end of the study. Rectally delivered urease and LT were well tolerated. Among the 12 subjects assigned to urease+LT, 2 (16.7%) developed anti-urease IgG Abs, 1 (8.3%) developed anti-urease IgA Abs, and 3 (25%) showed urease-specific IgA(+) ASCs. Immune responses to LT were more vigorous, especially in subjects exposed to 5 microg LT. In the urease+ 5 microg LT group, anti-LT IgG and IgA Abs developed in 60 and 80% of the subjects, respectively, while LT-specific IgG(+) and IgA(+) ASCs were detected in all subjects. The magnitude of the anti-LT response was much higher than the response to urease. No IgA anti-urease or anti-LT Abs were detected in stool or saliva and lymphocyte proliferative responses to urease were unsatisfactory. In conclusion, rectal delivery of 5 microg LT is safe and induces vigorous systemic anti-LT immune responses. Further studies are needed to determine if LT can be an effective adjuvant for rectally delivered antigens.
The Journal of Pediatrics | 1991
James C. Parke; Rachel Schneerson; Charles B. Reimer; Charlotte M. Black; Sandy Welfare; Dolores A. Bryla; Lily Levi; Danka Pavliakova; Tod Cramton; Dominique Schulz; Michel Cadoz; John B. Robbins
The safety and immunogenicity of Haemophilus influenzae type b-tetanus toxoid conjugate vaccine (Hib-TT) were evaluated in 77 healthy infants receiving injections at 3, 5, 7, and 18 months of age. No serious local or systemic reactions were noted. After the first injection the geometric mean Hib antibody level rose to 0.55 micrograms/ml, and each subsequent injection elicited a statistically significant rise in the geometric mean. The percentage of vaccinees with Hib antibody levels greater than 0.15 micrograms/ml serum was 75.5% after the first, 97.4% after the second, and 100% after the third Hib-TT injection. This percentage fell to 90.9% at 18 months of age but rose again to 100% after the fourth injection. Control infants (n = 10) injected with diphtheria-tetanus toxoid-pertussis vaccine only had nondetectable levels after the second injection. Hib-TT elicited increases of Hib antibody in all isotypes: IgG greater than IgM greater than IgA. Among IgG subclasses the highest increases were of IgG1. All vaccinated subjects had greater than 0.01 U/ml of TT antibody (estimated protective level) throughout the study. We conclude that Hib-TT, injected at 3, 5, 7, and 18 months, is safe and induces protective levels of antibodies during the age of highest incidence of meningitis caused by Hib.
European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 1996
A. Yam; J.Y. Gagnepain; Steven G. F. Wassilak; B. Danve; Michel Cadoz
A diphtheria and tetanus toxoid two-component acellular pertussis vaccine (DTaP), consisting of 25 μg glutaraldehyde-detoxified pertussis toxin (PT) and 25 μg native filamentous hemagglutinin (FHA), was compared with diphtheria and tetanus toxoid whole-cell pertussis vaccine (DTwP) in a randomized, double-blind manner in 286 Senegalese infants inoculated at two, four, and six months of age. In infants receiving DTaP a significantly lower rate of local reactions, crying and fever was observed than in infants receiving DTwP. One month after the third dose, the geometric mean titres for FHA antibodies were higher in the DTaP group, whereas increases in PT antibody titres were higher in the DTwP group. More than 90% of the infants had a fourfold or more increase in antibodies to both PT and FHA with either vaccine. Diphtheria, tetanus, and polio antibody responses were also measured and found to be comparable between the two groups. The results of this pilot study support the implementation of a field trial to compare the protective efficacy of these vaccines against pertussis in the same setting.